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Human-Robot Teaming: Communication, Coordination, and Collaboration

Terry Fong

Year
2017
Citations
3
Access
Open access

Abstract

In this talk, I will describe how NASA Ames has been studying how human-robot teams can increase the performance, reduce the cost, and increase the success of a variety of endeavors. The central premise of our work is that humans and robots should support one another in order to compensate for limitations of automation and manual control. This principle has broad applicability to a wide range of domains, environments, and situations. At the same time, however, effective human-robot teaming requires communication, coordination, and collaboration -- all of which present significant research challenges. I will discuss some of the ways that NASA Ames is addressing these challenges and present examples of our work involving planetary rovers, free-flying robots, and self-driving cars.

Keywords

RobotPremiseVariety (cybernetics)AutomationHuman–robot interactionHuman–computer interactionComputer scienceEngineeringSystems engineeringArtificial intelligence

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