DocumentCode
742917
Title
Haptic Shared Control in Tele-Manipulation: Effects of Inaccuracies in Guidance on Task Execution
Author
van Oosterhout, Jeroen ; Wildenbeest, Jeroen G. W. ; Boessenkool, Henri ; Heemskerk, Cock J. M. ; de Baar, Marco R. ; van der Helm, Frans C. T. ; Abbink, David A.
Author_Institution
Assoc. EURATOM-FOM, Partner in the Trilateral Euregio Cluster, FOM Inst. DIFFER (Dutch Inst. for Fundamental Energy Res.), Nieuwegein, Netherlands
Volume
8
Issue
2
fYear
2015
Firstpage
164
Lastpage
175
Abstract
Haptic shared control is a promising approach to improve tele-manipulated task execution, by making safe and effective control actions tangible through guidance forces. In current research, these guidance forces are most often generated based on pre-generated, errorless models of the remote environment. Hence such guidance forces are exempt from the inaccuracies that can be expected in practical implementations. The goal of this research is to quantify the extent to which task execution is degraded by inaccuracies in the model on which haptic guidance forces are based. In a human-in-the-loop experiment, subjects (n = 14) performed a realistic tele-manipulated assembly task in a virtual environment. Operators were provided with various levels of haptic guidance, namely no haptic guidance (conventional tele-manipulation), haptic guidance without inaccuracies, and haptic guidance with translational inaccuracies (one large inaccuracy, in the order of magnitude of the task, and a second smaller inaccuracy). The quality of natural haptic feedback (i.e., haptic transparency) was varied between high and low to identify the operator´s ability to detect and cope with inaccuracies in haptic guidance. The results indicate that haptic guidance is beneficial for task execution when no inaccuracies are present in the guidance. When inaccuracies are present, this may degrade task execution, depending on the magnitude and the direction of the inaccuracy. The effect of inaccuracies on overall task performance is dominated by effects found for the Constrained Translational Movement, due to its potential for jamming. No evidence was found that a higher quality of haptic transparency helps operators to detect and cope with inaccuracies in the haptic guidance.
Keywords
haptic interfaces; virtual reality; constrained translational movement; control actions; haptic guidance forces; haptic shared control; haptic transparency quality; human-in-the-loop experiment; natural haptic feedback quality; task performance; tele-manipulated assembly task; tele-manipulated task execution; virtual environment; Control design; Electron tubes; Force; Haptic interfaces; Measurement; Visualization; Welding; Haptic shared control; Haptics; Remote handling; Tele-manipulation; haptic shared control; haptics; remote handling;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Haptics, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1939-1412
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TOH.2015.2406708
Filename
7047839
Link To Document