How search and its subtasks scale in N robots

The present study investigates the effect of the number of controlled robots on performance of an urban search and rescue (USAR) task using a realistic simulation. Participants controlled either 4, 8, or 12 robots. In the fulltask control condition participants both dictated the robots' paths a...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in2009 4th ACM/IEEE International Conference on Human-Robot Interaction (HRI) pp. 141 - 148
Main Authors Wang, Huadong, Lewis, Michael, Velagapudi, Prasanna, Scerri, Paul, Sycara, Katia
Format Conference Proceeding
LanguageEnglish
Published New York, NY, USA ACM 09.03.2009
IEEE
SeriesACM Conferences
Subjects
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ISBN1605584045
9781605584041
ISSN2167-2121
DOI10.1145/1514095.1514122

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Summary:The present study investigates the effect of the number of controlled robots on performance of an urban search and rescue (USAR) task using a realistic simulation. Participants controlled either 4, 8, or 12 robots. In the fulltask control condition participants both dictated the robots' paths and controlled their cameras to search for victims. In the exploration condition, participants directed the team of robots in order to explore as wide an area as possible. In the perceptual search condition, participants searched for victims by controlling cameras mounted on robots following predetermined paths selected to match characteristics of paths generated under the other two conditions. By decomposing the search and rescue task into exploration and perceptual search subtasks the experiment allows the determination of their scaling characteristics in order to provide a basis for tentative task allocations among humans and automation for controlling larger robot teams. In the fulltask control condition task performance increased in going from four to eight controlled robots but deteriorated in moving from eight to twelve. Workload increased monotonically with number of robots. Performance per robot decreased with increases in team size. Results are consistent with earlier studies suggesting a limit of between 8-12 robots for direct human control.
ISBN:1605584045
9781605584041
ISSN:2167-2121
DOI:10.1145/1514095.1514122