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Gestures for industry Intuitive human-robot communication from human observation

Brian T. Gleeson, Karon E. MacLean, Amir Haddadi, Elizabeth A. Croft, Javier Alcazar

Year
2013
Citations
106

Abstract

Human-robot collaborative work has the potential to advance quality, efficiency and safety in manufacturing. In this paper we present a gestural communication lexicon for human-robot collaboration in industrial assembly tasks and establish methodology for producing such a lexicon. Our user experiments are grounded in a study of industry needs, providing potential real-world applicability to our results. Actions required for industrial assembly tasks are abstracted into three classes: part acquisition, part manipulation, and part operations. We analyzed the communication between human pairs performing these subtasks and derived a set of communication terms and gestures. We found that participant-provided gestures are intuitive and well suited to robotic implementation, but that interpretation is highly dependent on task context. We then implemented these gestures on a robot arm in a human-robot interaction context, and found the gestures to be easily interpreted by observers. We found that observation of human-human interaction can be effective in determining what should be communicated in a given human-robot task, how communication gestures should be executed, and priorities for robotic system implementation based on frequency of use.

Keywords

GestureComputer scienceHuman–robot interactionTask (project management)Human–computer interactionContext (archaeology)RobotSet (abstract data type)LexiconArtificial intelligence

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