Presentation
94. Perceptions of Autonomous Robot Teammates During Field Operations
SessionPoster Session 2
DescriptionTrust remains a critical focus within human/robot interaction research, as well-calibrated trust results in higher collaborative performance performance. We investigated the relationship between the perceived characteristics of a robot teammate and trust by equipping United States Military Academy (USMA) cadets with a pseudo-autonomous quadrupedal robot teammate during field training. This allowed us to explore interaction with an autonomous robot interaction in an applied setting, where environmental conditions could potentially reshape the interaction. Cadets completed a raid in an urban setting while being able to issue simple voice commands to the robot teammate. We found that the likability, animacy, perceived intelligence, and perceived safety of the robot positively correlated with trust.
Event Type
Poster
TimeThursday, September 12th5:30pm - 6:30pm MST
LocationMcArthur Ballroom
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