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Incorporating mental simulation for a more effective robotic teammate

William G. Kennedy, Magdalena Bugajska, William Adams, Alan C. Schultz, J. Gregory Trafton

Year
2008
Citations
14

Abstract

How can we facilitate human-robot teamwork? The teamwork literature has identified the need to know the capabilities of teammates. How can we integrate the knowledge of another capabilities for a justifiably intelligent teammate? This paper describes extensions to the cognitive architecture, ACT - R, and the use of artificial intelligence (AI) and cognitive science approaches to produce a more cognitively-plausible, autonomous robotic system that "mentally" simulates the decision-making of its teammate. The extensions to ACT-R added capabilities to interact with the real world through the robot's sensors and effectors and simulate the decision-making of its teammate. The AI applications provided visual sensor capabilities by methods clearly different than those used by humans. The integration of these approaches into intelligent team-based behavior is demonstrated on a mobile robot. Our "TeamBot" matches the descriptive work and theories on human teamwork. We illustrate our approach in a spatial, team-oriented task of a guard force responding appropriately to an alarm condition that requires the human and robot team to "man" two guard stations as soon as possible after the alarm.

Keywords

Computer scienceTeamworkHuman–computer interactionRobotALARMGuard (computer science)Task (project management)Cognitive roboticsHuman–robot interactionArtificial intelligence

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