Close

Presentation

39. Getting Along With Autonomous Teammates: Understanding the Socio-Emotional and Teaming Aspects of Trust in Human-Autonomy Teams
DescriptionTrust plays a critical role in both effective teamwork and the effective use of autonomous technologies, and therefore holds paramount importance in human-autonomy teaming (HAT). With rapid advancements in large language models, autonomous teammates have increasing potential to communicate and coordinate like a human using natural human language, presenting challenges and opportunities for understanding how these behaviors might influence social perceptions and trust. Using qualitative analysis of the interviews with participants who collaborated in a three-member HAT, this study is the first to identify the socio-emotional and team-related qualities that humans desire in their autonomous teammate for them to trust it. Findings of this study provide valuable insights into the design of trustworthy autonomous teammates and effective human-autonomy collaboration.
Event Type
Poster
TimeThursday, September 12th5:30pm - 6:30pm MST
LocationMcArthur Ballroom
Tracks
Aging
Augmented Cognition
Children's Issues
Communications
Cybersecurity
Education
Environmental Design
General Sessions
Human AI Robot Teaming (AI)
Macroergonomics
Occupational Ergonomics
Student Forum
Surface Transportation
Sustainability
System Development