Naomi Harrison
Papers
1
Total Citations
8
H-Index
1
About
Naomi Harrison’s research lies at the intersection of human-robot interaction, supervisory control, and telepresence systems, with a focus on enhancing operator performance in complex, remote manipulation tasks. Her most cited work, “Active Telepresence Assistance for Supervisory Control: A User Study with a Multi-Camera Tele-Nursing Robot” (2021, 8 citations), addresses a critical challenge in teleoperation: managing multiple camera feeds to maintain situational awareness while controlling a robot. Harrison’s key contribution is the development and evaluation of autonomous camera control and selection algorithms that reduce operator workload and improve task efficiency. By demonstrating that intelligent camera management can significantly ease the cognitive burden of coordinating perception and action, her work has implications for tele-nursing, hazardous environment operations, and space exploration. Though early in her career, Harrison’s user-centered approach and focus on practical, assistive autonomy mark her as a rising voice in robotics. Her findings offer a clear path toward more intuitive and effective supervisory control systems, making her research essential reading for those designing next-generation teleoperation interfaces.
Research Focus
Key Achievements
Top Papers
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