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Second Joint EuroHaptics Conference and Symposium on Haptic Interfaces for Virtual Environment and Teleoperator Systems (WHC'07)
User Perception and Preference in Model Mediated Telemanipulation
Tsukuba, Japan
March 22-March 24
ISBN: 0-7695-2738-8
Probal Mitra, Telerobotics Lab, Stanford University, USA
Diana Gentry, Telerobotics Lab, Stanford University, USA
Gunter Niemeyer, Telerobotics Lab, Stanford University, USA
Model mediated teleoperation allows users to interact with a remote environment via a local rendition to mitigate the effects of large communication delays. As the slave encounters an environment a model is identified, transmitted to the master, then haptically and graphically recreated. Particular attention must be paid to the user interface when model information is updated, to avoid confusion or disruptive effects. This paper examines various transition methods from the perspective of user preferences and perception. Transitions are grouped according to three basic philosophies: hiding changes from the user, forcing changes upon the user, and alerting users to model updates. A user study is presented which evaluated subjects? performance and opinions for different approaches. We found transitions that gradually but actively presented information to be the most successful.
Citation:
Probal Mitra, Diana Gentry, Gunter Niemeyer, "User Perception and Preference in Model Mediated Telemanipulation," whc, pp.268-273, Second Joint EuroHaptics Conference and Symposium on Haptic Interfaces for Virtual Environment and Teleoperator Systems (WHC'07), 2007
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