Effects of Swarm Size Variability on Operator Workload
William Hunt, Aleksandra Landowska, Horia A. Maior, Sarvapali D. Ramchurn, Mohammad Soorati

TL;DR
This study examines how dynamic changes in swarm size affect human operator workload, revealing that small size changes influence perceived workload differently than large shifts, which induce a reset effect.
Contribution
It provides empirical insights into how swarm size fluctuations impact operator workload, informing better design of human--swarm interaction systems.
Findings
Small increases in swarm size maintain lower workload.
Small decreases in size elevate perceived workload.
Large changes in either direction induce a cognitive reset.
Abstract
Real-world deployments of human--swarm teams depend on balancing operator workload to leverage human strengths without inducing overload. A key challenge is that swarm size is often dynamic: robots may join or leave the mission due to failures or redeployment, causing abrupt workload fluctuations. Understanding how such changes affect human workload and performance is critical for robust human--swarm interaction design. This paper investigates how the magnitude and direction of changes in swarm size influence operator workload. Drawing on the concept of workload history, we test three hypotheses: (1) workload remains elevated following decreases in swarm size, (2) small increases are more manageable than large jumps, and (3) sufficiently large changes override these effects by inducing a cognitive reset. We conducted two studies (N = 34) using a monitoring task with simulated drone…
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