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Spatial perception and robot operation: The relationship between visual spatial ability and performance under direct line of sight and teleoperation

Posted on:2011-03-28Degree:Ph.DType:Dissertation
University:Clemson UniversityCandidate:Gomer, Joshua AdamFull Text:PDF
GTID:1448390002464158Subject:Psychology
Abstract/Summary:
This dissertation investigated the relationship between the spatial perception abilities of operators and robot operation under direct-line-of-sight and teleoperation viewing conditions. This study was an effort to determine if spatial ability testing may be a useful tool in the selection of human-robot interaction (HRI) operators. Participants completed eight cognitive ability measures and operated one of four types of robots under tasks of low and high difficulty. Performance for each participant was tested during both direct-line-of-sight and teleoperation. These results provide additional evidence that spatial perception abilities are reliable predictors of direct-line-of-sight and teleoperation performance. Participants in this study with higher spatial abilities performed faster, with fewer errors, and less variability. In addition, participants with higher spatial abilities were more successful in the accumulation of points. Applications of these findings are discussed in terms of teleoperator selection tools and HRI training and design recommendations with a human-centered design approach.
Keywords/Search Tags:Spatial, Teleoperation, Performance, Abilities
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