Practice Makes Perfect: A Study of Digital Twin Technology for Assembly and Problem-solving using Lunar Surface Telerobotics
Xavier O'Keefe, Katy McCutchan, Alexis Muniz, Jack Burns, and Daniel Szafir

TL;DR
This study evaluates a virtual reality digital twin system designed to train human operators for lunar surface rover teleoperation, demonstrating significant improvements in mission efficiency and error reduction.
Contribution
The paper introduces and assesses a VR digital twin system for rover teleoperation training, showing its effectiveness in improving performance and reducing errors during lunar surface tasks.
Findings
28% decrease in mission completion time
85% reduction in unrecoverable errors
Decreased cognitive load and increased situation awareness
Abstract
Robotic systems that can traverse planetary or lunar surfaces to collect environmental data and perform physical manipulation tasks, such as assembling equipment or conducting mining operations, are envisioned to form the backbone of future human activities in space. However, the environmental conditions in which these robots, or "rovers," operate present challenges toward achieving fully autonomous solutions, meaning that rover missions will require some degree of human teleoperation or supervision for the foreseeable future. As a result, human operators require training to successfully direct rovers and avoid costly errors or mission failures, as well as the ability to recover from any issues that arise on the fly during mission activities. While analog environments, such as JPL's Mars Yard, can help with such training by simulating surface environments in the real world, access to…
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Taxonomy
TopicsTeleoperation and Haptic Systems · Human-Automation Interaction and Safety · Augmented Reality Applications
