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Initial studies in human-robot-human interaction

Kyle B. Reed, Michael A. Peshkin, J. Edward Colgate, James L. Patton

Year
2004
Citations
2

Abstract

Often two people must work together physically on a common task, such as lifting and positioning a long board, or, in our model experimental system, turning a two-handled crank. Such tasks involve communication between the people, mediated by the task kinematics and dynamics: each person feels forces and motions produced by the other and derives some meaning from them. Tasks may include a degree of competition: the two people may not have exactly the same goal in mind, and must negotiate a compromise. Understanding human-human communication is important in designing robots for interaction with humans, and for robots that provide powered assistance for human-human tasks (such as physical therapy).

Keywords

RobotTask (project management)Computer scienceCompromiseKinematicsHuman–computer interactionHuman–robot interactionNegotiationWork (physics)Robot kinematics

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