HREyes: Design, Development, and Evaluation of a Novel Method for AUVs to Communicate Information and Gaze Direction
Michael Fulton, Aditya Prabhu, Junaed Sattar

TL;DR
HREyes introduces biomimetic light-based communication devices for AUVs, enabling explicit information sharing and gaze direction signaling to divers, with demonstrated accuracy and potential for easy integration in underwater environments.
Contribution
This work presents the first method for AUVs to communicate gaze direction and information using biomimetic light displays, improving nonverbal communication with divers.
Findings
Active lucemes are accurately recognized by trained users.
Limited intuitive understanding of lucemes by untrained users.
Gaze direction is perceived accurately across users.
Abstract
We present the design, development, and evaluation of HREyes: biomimetic communication devices which use light to communicate information and, for the first time, gaze direction from AUVs to humans. First, we introduce two types of information displays using the HREye devices: active lucemes and ocular lucemes. Active lucemes communicate information explicitly through animations, while ocular lucemes communicate gaze direction implicitly by mimicking human eyes. We present a human study in which our system is compared to the use of an embedded digital display that explicitly communicates information to a diver by displaying text. Our results demonstrate accurate recognition of active lucemes for trained interactants, limited intuitive understanding of these lucemes for untrained interactants, and relatively accurate perception of gaze direction for all interactants. The results on…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsUnderwater Vehicles and Communication Systems · Tactile and Sensory Interactions · Marine animal studies overview
