Title :
Towards human-friendly efficient control of multi-robot teams
Author :
Stoica, Atanasia ; Theodoridis, T. ; Huosheng Hu ; McDonald-Maier, K. ; Barrero, David F.
Author_Institution :
Jet Propulsion Lab., Pasadena, CA, USA
Abstract :
This paper explores means to increase efficiency in performing tasks with multi-robot teams, in the context of natural Human-Multi-Robot Interfaces (HMRI) for command and control. The motivating scenario is an emergency evacuation by a transport convoy of unmanned ground vehicles (UGVs) that have to traverse, in shortest time, an unknown terrain. In the experiments the operator commands, in minimal time, a group of rovers through a maze. The efficiency of performing such tasks depends on both, the levels of robots´ autonomy, and the ability of the operator to command and control the team. The paper extends the classic framework of levels of autonomy (LOA), to levels/hierarchy of autonomy characteristic of Groups (G-LOA), and uses it to determine new strategies for control. An UGVoriented command language (UGVL) is defined, and a mapping is performed from the human-friendly gesture-based HMRI into the UGVL. The UGVL is used to control a team of 3 robots, exploring the efficiency of different G-LOA; specifically, by (a) controlling each robot individually through the maze, (b) controlling a leader and cloning its controls to followers, and (c) controlling the entire group. Not surprisingly, commands at increased G-LOA lead to a faster traverse, yet a number of aspects are worth discussing in this context.
Keywords :
command and control systems; human-robot interaction; multi-robot systems; remotely operated vehicles; G-LOA; UGVL; UGVoriented command language; command and control; human-friendly efficient control; human-friendly gesture-based HMRI; human-multi robot interfaces; level of autonomy characteristic of groups; levels of autonomy; multi-robot teams; unmanned ground vehicles; Aerospace electronics; Cloning; Command languages; Electromyography; Robot kinematics; Robot sensing systems; Multi-robot control; adaptive autonomy; autonomy of robot teams; group levels of autonomy; human-robot interfaces; robot language; sliding autonomy;
Conference_Titel :
Collaboration Technologies and Systems (CTS), 2013 International Conference on
Conference_Location :
San Diego, CA
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4673-6403-4
DOI :
10.1109/CTS.2013.6567233