Publication | Closed Access
Finding the FOO: a pilot study for a multimodal interface
19
Citations
4
References
2004
Year
Unknown Venue
EngineeringHuman-machine InteractionEducationCommunicationEmbodied AgentMultimodal InterfaceSearch SpaceVirtual RealityMultimodal InteractionRobot LearningEmbodied RoboticsMultimodal Human Computer InterfaceCognitive ScienceAssistive TechnologyUser ExperienceMultimodal Signal ProcessingComputer ScienceHuman-robot InteractionHuman-computer InteractionIntuitive MeansRobotics
In our research on intuitive means for humans and intelligent, mobile robots to collaborate, we use a multimodal interface that supports speech and gestural inputs. As a preliminary step to evaluate our approach and to identify practical areas for future work, we conducted a wizard-of-Oz pilot study with five participants who each collaborated with a robot on a search task in a separate room. The goal was to find a sign in the robot's environment with the word "FOO" printed on it. Using a subset of our multimodal interface, participants were told to direct the collaboration. As their subordinate, the robot would understand their utterances and gestures, and recognize objects and structures in the search space. Participants conversed with the robot through a wireless microphone and headphone and, for gestural input, used a touch screen displaying alternative views of the robot's environment to indicate locations and objects.
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