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International Studies in Phenomenology and Philosophy

Book | Chapter

191420

Development of a squad level vocabulary for human-robot interaction

Daniel Barber Ryan W. Wohleber Avonie Parchment Florian Jentsch Linda Elliott

pp. 139-148

Abstract

Interaction with robots in military applications is trending away from teleoperation and towards collaboration. Enabling this transition requires technologies for natural and intuitive communication between Soldiers and robots. Automated Speech Recognition (ASR) systems designed using a well-defined lexicon are likely to be more robust to the challenges of dynamic and noisy environments inherent to military operations. To successfully apply this approach to ASR development, lexicons should involve an early focus on the target audience. To facilitate development a vocabulary focused at the squad level for Human Robot Interaction (HRI), 31 Soldiers from Officer Candidate School at Ft. Benning, GA provided hypothetical commands for directing an autonomous robot to perform a variety of spatial navigation and reconnaissance tasks. These commands were analyzed, using word frequency counts and heuristics, to determine the structure and word choice of commands. Results presented provide a baseline Squad Level Vocabulary (SLV) and a foundation for development of HRI technologies enabling multi-modal communications within mixed-initiative teams.

Publication details

Published in:

Shumaker Randall, Lackey Stephanie (2014) Virtual, augmented and mixed reality. designing and developing virtual and augmented environments: Designing and developing virtual and augmented environments. Dordrecht, Springer.

Pages: 139-148

DOI: 10.1007/978-3-319-07458-0_14

Full citation:

Barber Daniel, Wohleber Ryan W., Parchment Avonie, Jentsch Florian, Elliott Linda (2014) „Development of a squad level vocabulary for human-robot interaction“, In: R. Shumaker & S. Lackey (eds.), Virtual, augmented and mixed reality. designing and developing virtual and augmented environments, Dordrecht, Springer, 139–148.