Title :
Towards the development of 1-to-n human machine interfaces for unmanned aerial vehicles
Author :
Jenner, James George ; Alvarez, Luis Mejias
Author_Institution :
Queensland Univ. of Tech., QLD, Australia
Abstract :
Multi-touch interfaces across a wide range of hardware platforms are becoming pervasive. This is due to the adoption of smart phones and tablets in both the consumer and corporate market place. This paper proposes a human-machine interface to interact with unmanned aerial systems based on the philosophy of multi-touch hardware-independent high-level interaction with multiple systems simultaneously. Our approach incorporates emerging development methods for multi-touch interfaces on mobile platforms. A framework is defined for supporting multiple protocols. An open source solution is presented that demonstrates: architecture supporting different communications hardware; an extensible approach for supporting multiple protocols; and the ability to monitor and interact with multiple UAVs from multiple clients simultaneously. Validation tests were conducted to assess the performance, scalability and impact on packet latency under different client configurations.
Keywords :
autonomous aerial vehicles; control engineering computing; haptic interfaces; human computer interaction; human-robot interaction; mobile computing; mobile robots; smart phones; telerobotics; 1-to-n human machine interface; client configuration; communications hardware; hardware platform; mobile platforms; multiple UAV interaction; multiple UAV monitoring; multiple clients; multiple protocols; multitouch hardware-independent high-level interaction; multitouch interface; open source solution; packet latency; smart phones; tablets; unmanned aerial vehicles; Computer architecture; Hardware; Protocols; Servers; Smart phones; Software; Vehicles; HTML5; Touch; UAV; cross-platform; ground control station; open source; thin client;
Conference_Titel :
Unmanned Aircraft Systems (ICUAS), 2014 International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Orlando, FL
DOI :
10.1109/ICUAS.2014.6842258