Pheelab

Trimanipulation:Evaluation of human performance in a 3-handed coordination task

trimanipulation

Many teleoperation tasks require three or more tools working together, which need the cooperation of multiple operators. The effectiveness of such schemes may be limited by communication issues between individuals. Trimanipulation by a single operator using an artificial third arm controlled together with their natural arms may address this issue. Foot-controlled interfaces have previously shown the capability to be used for the continuous control of robot arms. However, the use of such interfaces for controlling a supernumerary robotic limb in coordination with the natural limbs is not well understood. In this paper, a teleoperation task imitating physically-coupled hands in a virtual reality scene was conducted with 14 subjects to evaluate human performance during trimanipulation. The participants were required to move three limbs together in a coordinated way mimicking three arms holding a shared physical object. It was found that after a short practice session, three-hand trimanipulation with a single subject’s hands and foot was still slower than dyad operation. However, they displayed similar performance in their success rate and higher motion efficiency than two people cooperating.

Paper: Huang, Yanpei et al. Trimanipulation: Evaluation of human performance in a 3-handed coordination task.” 2021 IEEE international conference on systems, Man, and cybernetics (SMC). IEEE, 2021.


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