Research Analyzer
← Back IROS 2024

Reconciling Conflicting Intents: Bidirectional Trust-Based Variable Autonomy for Mobile Robots

Yinglin Li, Rongxin Cui, Weisheng Yan, shi zhang, Chenguang Yang

PDF

Abstract

In the realm of semi-autonomous mobile robots de- signed for remote operation with humans, current variable au- tonomy approaches struggle to reconcile conflicting intents while ensuring compliance, autonomy, and safety. To address this chal- lenge, we propose a bidirectional trust-based variable autonomy (BTVA) control approach. By incorporating diverse trust factors and leveraging Kalman filtering techniques, we establish a core abstraction layer to construct the state-space model of bidirectional computational trust. This bidirectional trust is integrated into the variable autonomy control loop. Real-time modulation of the degree of automation is achieved through variable weight receding horizon optimization. Through a within-group experimental study with twenty participants in a semi-autonomous navigation task, we validatetheeffectivenessofourmethodingoaltransferandassisted teleoperation. Statistical analysis reveals that our method achieves a balance between rapid response and trajectory smoothness. Com- pared with binary control switching, this method reduces operator workload by 14.3% and enhances system usability by 9.9%.

Index terms

Human-Robot Collaboration Telerobotics and Teleoperation Human Factors and Human-in-the-Loop