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A study on the effects of cognitive overloading and distractions on human movement during robot-assisted dressing

Dogramadzi, Sanja; Caleb-Solly, Praminda; Camilleri, Antonella

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Authors

Praminda Caleb-Solly

Antonella Camilleri Antonella.Camilleri@uwe.ac.uk
Research Fellow - Computer Vision and Machine Learning



Abstract

For robots that can provide physical assistance, maintaining synchronicity of the robot and human movement is a precursor for interaction safety. Existing research on collaborative HRI does not consider how synchronicity can be affected if humans are subjected to cognitive overloading and distractions during close physical interaction. Cognitive neuroscience has shown that unexpected events during interactions not only affect action cognition but also human motor control Gentsch et al. (Cognition, 2016, 146, 81–89). If the robot is to safely adapt its trajectory to distracted human motion, quantitative changes in the human movement should be evaluated. The main contribution of this study is the analysis and quantification of disrupted human movement during a physical collaborative task that involves robot-assisted dressing. Quantifying disrupted movement is the first step in maintaining the synchronicity of the human-robot interaction. The human movement data collected from a series of experiments where participants are subjected to cognitive loading and distractions during the human-robot interaction, are projected in a 2-D latent space that efficiently represents the high-dimensionality and non-linearity of the data. The quantitative data analysis is supported by a qualitative study of user experience, using the NASA Task Load Index to measure perceived workload, and the PeRDITA questionnaire to represent the human psychological state during these interactions. In addition, we present an experimental methodology to collect interaction data in this type of human-robot collaboration that provides realism, experimental rigour and high fidelity of the human-robot interaction in the scenarios.

Citation

Dogramadzi, S., Caleb-Solly, P., & Camilleri, A. (2022). A study on the effects of cognitive overloading and distractions on human movement during robot-assisted dressing. Frontiers in Robotics and AI, 9, Article 815871. https://doi.org/10.3389/frobt.2022.815871

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Apr 19, 2022
Online Publication Date May 3, 2022
Publication Date May 3, 2022
Deposit Date May 3, 2022
Publicly Available Date May 3, 2022
Journal Frontiers in Robotics and AI
Electronic ISSN 2296-9144
Publisher Frontiers Media
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 9
Article Number 815871
Series ISSN 2296-9144
DOI https://doi.org/10.3389/frobt.2022.815871
Keywords uman movement, safety, human robot interaction, close proximity, assistive dressing, cognition, collaborative behaviour
Public URL https://uwe-repository.worktribe.com/output/9440636
Publisher URL https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/frobt.2022.815871

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