Communicative Capital for Prosthetic Agents
Patrick M. Pilarski, Richard S. Sutton, Kory W. Mathewson, Craig, Sherstan, Adam S. R. Parker, Ann L. Edwards

TL;DR
This paper advocates viewing prosthetic devices as agents to enhance human-machine collaboration, introducing the concepts of agency and communicative capital to improve interaction and functionality of assistive technologies.
Contribution
It proposes a new agency-based schema for understanding human-prosthetic interaction and introduces communicative capital as a resource to improve collaboration.
Findings
Building communicative capital enables more effective task-oriented interactions.
Analyzing literature shows increased agency improves prosthetic-user collaboration.
Extends current thinking on supporting complex prosthetic use.
Abstract
This work presents an overarching perspective on the role that machine intelligence can play in enhancing human abilities, especially those that have been diminished due to injury or illness. As a primary contribution, we develop the hypothesis that assistive devices, and specifically artificial arms and hands, can and should be viewed as agents in order for us to most effectively improve their collaboration with their human users. We believe that increased agency will enable more powerful interactions between human users and next generation prosthetic devices, especially when the sensorimotor space of the prosthetic technology greatly exceeds the conventional control and communication channels available to a prosthetic user. To more concretely examine an agency-based view on prosthetic devices, we propose a new schema for interpreting the capacity of a human-machine collaboration as a…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEEG and Brain-Computer Interfaces · Muscle activation and electromyography studies · Neuroscience and Neural Engineering
