Publication | Closed Access
Comparing the usefulness of video and map information in navigation tasks
98
Citations
20
References
2006
Year
Unknown Venue
Robot OperatorEngineeringTeleoperationNavigation TasksIntelligent RoboticsCognitive RoboticsIntelligent SystemsSocial SciencesVirtual RealityMap InformationVideo Content AnalysisRobot LearningAutomatic NavigationCartographyCognitive ScienceRoboticsVision RoboticsAutonomous NavigationVideo CommunicationEye TrackingAutomationExtended RealityRobot TeleoperationSpatial CognitionIntegrated Representation
One of the fundamental aspects of robot teleoperation is the ability to successfully navigate a robot through an environment. We define successful navigation to mean that the robot minimizes collisions and arrives at the destination in a timely manner. Often video and map information is presented to a robot operator to aid in navigation tasks. This paper addresses the usefulness of map and video information in a navigation task by comparing a side-by-side (2D) representation and an integrated (3D) representation in both a simulated and a real world study. The results suggest that sometimes video is more helpful than a map and other times a map is more helpful than video. From a design perspective, an integrated representation seems to help navigation more than placing map and video side-by-side.
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