论文标题
一种评估与月球远程手工装配任务相关的人为因素的方法
A Methodology to Assess the Human Factors Associated with Lunar Teleoperated Assembly Tasks
论文作者
论文摘要
低延迟的远程固定剂可以在外星人行星体上实现比以往任何时候都更复杂的表面任务。为了使人类建立可持续的月球存在,人类与机器人之间的合作是要执行复杂的任务是必要的。本文提出了一种与远程手工装配任务相关的人为因素,情境意识(SA)和认知负载(CL)的方法。当前,从未尝试过在外星体内的远程动物组装,并且尚未开发出一种评估相关人为因素的有效方法。科罗拉多大学博尔德大学的远程植物学实验室创建了远程动物模拟系统(TSS),该系统能够远程操作漫游者和机器人手臂。 TSS用于实验室实验中,设计为对月球任务的类似物。操作员的任务是组装无线电干涉仪。每个参与者在两个条件下完成了此任务:远程遥控(有限的SA)和本地操作(最佳SA)。该实验的目的是建立一种方法,以在执行远程操作的组装任务时准确测量操作员的SA和CL。成功的方法将产生结果,显示在本地运行时显示出更大的SA和更低的CL。绩效指标在本地环境中显示出更大的SA和更低的CL,在远程操作时平均完成组装任务的平均时间增加了27%。 SA和CL的主观测量与性能指标不符。该实验的结果将指导未来的工作,试图准确量化与远程动物组装相关的人为因素。一旦开发出一种准确的方法论,我们将能够衡量新变量如何影响操作员的SA和CL,以优化远程动物组装任务的效率和有效性。
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 assemble a radio interferometer. Each participant completed this task under two conditions, remote teleoperation (limited SA) and local operation (optimal SA). The goal of the experiment was to establish a methodology to accurately measure the operator's SA and CL while performing teleoperated assembly tasks. A successful methodology would yield results showing greater SA and lower CL while operating locally. Performance metrics showed greater SA and lower CL in the local environment, supported by a 27% increase in the mean time to completion of the assembly task when operating remotely. Subjective measurements of SA and CL did not align with the performance metrics. Results from this experiment will guide future work attempting to accurately quantify the human factors associated with telerobotic assembly. Once an accurate methodology has been developed, we will be able to measure how new variables affect an operator's SA and CL to optimize the efficiency and effectiveness of telerobotic assembly tasks.