TL;DR
This paper introduces task-level authoring for remote robot teleoperation, enabling users with limited robotics experience to create flexible robot behaviors through high-level commands, improving usability and task complexity handling.
Contribution
The paper presents a novel system allowing novice users to specify high-level task sequences for robots, balancing ease of use with complex autonomous behaviors in variable environments.
Findings
Participants successfully performed complex manipulation tasks.
Users preferred the task-level authoring system over direct control interfaces.
The approach enabled flexible autonomy and adaptability in teleoperation.
Abstract
Remote teleoperation of robots can broaden the reach of domain specialists across a wide range of industries such as home maintenance, health care, light manufacturing, and construction. However, current direct control methods are impractical, and existing tools for programming robot remotely have focused on users with significant robotic experience. Extending robot remote programming to end users, i.e., users who are experts in a domain but novices in robotics, requires tools that balance the rich features necessary for complex teleoperation tasks with ease of use. The primary challenge to usability is that novice users are unable to specify complete and robust task plans to allow a robot to perform duties autonomously, particularly in highly variable environments. Our solution is to allow operators to specify shorter sequences of high-level commands, which we call task-level…
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