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Autor(en): Gong, Yijie
Mat Husin, Haliza
Erol, Ecda
Ortenzi, Valerio
Kuchenbecker, Katherine J.
Titel: AiroTouch : enhancing telerobotic assembly through naturalistic haptic feedback of tool vibrations
Erscheinungsdatum: 2024
Dokumentart: Zeitschriftenartikel
Seiten: 15
Erschienen in: Frontiers in robotics and AI 11 (2024), No. 1355205
URI: http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bsz:93-opus-ds-146463
http://elib.uni-stuttgart.de/handle/11682/14646
http://dx.doi.org/10.18419/opus-14627
ISSN: 2296-9144
Zusammenfassung: Teleoperation allows workers to safely control powerful construction machines; however, its primary reliance on visual feedback limits the operator’s efficiency in situations with stiff contact or poor visibility, hindering its use for assembly of pre-fabricated building components. Reliable, economical, and easy-to-implement haptic feedback could fill this perception gap and facilitate the broader use of robots in construction and other application areas. Thus, we adapted widely available commercial audio equipment to create AiroTouch, a naturalistic haptic feedback system that measures the vibration experienced by each robot tool and enables the operator to feel a scaled version of this vibration in real time. Accurate haptic transmission was achieved by optimizing the positions of the system’s off-the-shelf accelerometers and voice-coil actuators. A study was conducted to evaluate how adding this naturalistic type of vibrotactile feedback affects the operator during telerobotic assembly. Thirty participants used a bimanual dexterous teleoperation system (Intuitive da Vinci Si) to build a small rigid structure under three randomly ordered haptic feedback conditions: no vibrations, one-axis vibrations, and summed three-axis vibrations. The results show that users took advantage of both tested versions of the naturalistic haptic feedback after gaining some experience with the task, causing significantly lower vibrations and forces in the second trial. Subjective responses indicate that haptic feedback increased the realism of the interaction and reduced the perceived task duration, task difficulty, and fatigue. As hypothesized, higher haptic feedback gains were chosen by users with larger hands and for the smaller sensed vibrations in the one-axis condition. These results elucidate important details for effective implementation of naturalistic vibrotactile feedback and demonstrate that our accessible audio-based approach could enhance user performance and experience during telerobotic assembly in construction and other application domains.
Enthalten in den Sammlungen:07 Fakultät Konstruktions-, Produktions- und Fahrzeugtechnik

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