Human-Robot Collaboration in a Sanding Task

Robots can help reduce physical stress in manual sanding, but implementation has been challenging due to the skill required, task variability, and robot limitations. In shared control (SC) a robot operates semi-autonomously while the human provides real-time corrections. A laboratory study tested th...

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Veröffentlicht in:Proceedings of the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society Annual Meeting 2023-09, Vol.67 (1), p.845-846
Hauptverfasser: Konstant, Anna, Orr, Nitzan, Hagenow, Michael, Senft, Emmanuel, Gundrum, Isabelle, Mutlu, Bilge, Zinn, Michael, Gleicher, Michael, Radwin, Robert G.
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Robots can help reduce physical stress in manual sanding, but implementation has been challenging due to the skill required, task variability, and robot limitations. In shared control (SC) a robot operates semi-autonomously while the human provides real-time corrections. A laboratory study tested the effectiveness of SC for removing paint using an orbital sander. A robot autonomously sanded the surface, and twenty participants sanded manually and in collaboration with a robot using SC. Subjective discomfort for manual sanding was greater than SC in the upper arm by 28.5%, the lower arm by 29%, the hand by 38%, and the shoulder by 42%. Muscle fatigue, measured using EMG, was 22.4% greater for the manual condition. Cognitive workload measured using the NASA TLX was 14.25% more for manual sanding. Digital imaging showed that SC outperformed the fully autonomous robot by 10.75% for uniformity, by 4.96% for quantity, and by 6.06% for average performance.
ISSN:1071-1813
2169-5067
DOI:10.1177/21695067231193667