Paper ID: 2504.03098 • Published Apr 4, 2025
The Use of Gaze-Derived Confidence of Inferred Operator Intent in Adjusting Safety-Conscious Haptic Assistance
TL;DR
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Humans directly completing tasks in dangerous or hazardous conditions is not
always possible where these tasks are increasingly be performed remotely by
teleoperated robots. However, teleoperation is difficult since the operator
feels a disconnect with the robot caused by missing feedback from several
senses, including touch, and the lack of depth in the video feedback presented
to the operator. To overcome this problem, the proposed system actively infers
the operator's intent and provides assistance based on the predicted intent.
Furthermore, a novel method of calculating confidence in the inferred intent
modifies the human-in-the-loop control. The operator's gaze is employed to
intuitively indicate the target before the manipulation with the robot begins.
A potential field method is used to provide a guiding force towards the
intended target, and a safety boundary reduces risk of damage. Modifying these
assistances based on the confidence level in the operator's intent makes the
control more natural, and gives the robot an intuitive understanding of its
human master. Initial validation results show the ability of the system to
improve accuracy, execution time, and reduce operator error.
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