A Methodology to Assess the Human Factors Associated with Lunar Teleoperated Assembly Tasks
Arun Kumar, Mason Bell, Benjamin Mellinkoff, Alex Sandoval, Wendy, Bailey Martin, Jack Burns

TL;DR
This paper develops and tests a methodology to evaluate human factors like situational awareness and cognitive load during lunar teleoperated assembly tasks, using a simulated environment to inform future extraterrestrial robotics operations.
Contribution
It introduces a novel methodology for assessing human factors in lunar teleoperation, validated through a simulated experiment comparing remote and local operation conditions.
Findings
Greater situational awareness in local operation
Lower cognitive load when operating locally
Remote operation increased task completion time by 27%
Abstract
Low-latency telerobotics can enable more intricate surface tasks on extraterrestrial planetary bodies than has ever been attempted. For humanity to create a sustainable lunar presence, well-developed collaboration between humans and robots is necessary to perform complex tasks. This paper presents a methodology to assess the human factors, situational awareness (SA) and cognitive load (CL), associated with teleoperated assembly tasks. Currently, telerobotic assembly on an extraterrestrial body has never been attempted, and a valid methodology to assess the associated human factors has not been developed. The Telerobotics Laboratory at the University of Colorado-Boulder created the Telerobotic Simulation System (TSS) which enables remote operation of a rover and a robotic arm. The TSS was used in a laboratory experiment designed as an analog to a lunar mission. The operator's task was to…
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