<p>While much work in human-robot interaction has focused on leaderfollower teamwork models, the recent advancement of robotic systems that have access to vast amounts of information suggests the need for robots that take into account the quality of the human decision making and actively guide people towards better ways of doing their task. This thesis proposes an equal-partners model, where human and robot engage in a dance of inference and action, and focuses on one particular instance of this dance: the robot adapts its own actions via estimating the probability of the human adapting to the robot. We start with a bounded-memory model of human adaptation parameterized by the human adaptability - the probability of the human switching towa...
Human-in-the-loop robot control systems naturally provide the means for synergistic human-robot col...
We present a framework for automatically learning human user models from joint-action demonstrations...
As robots become more common in our daily lives, they will be expected to interact with and work wit...
While much work in human-robot interaction has focused on leaderfollower teamwork models, the recent...
To make the cooperation within a physical human-robot team as efficient as possible, the team member...
This data was gathered in an experiment with the aim of studying mutual adaptations in a human-robot...
We are interested in asymmetric human-robot teams, where a human supervisor occasionally takes over ...
We present the effect of adapting to human preferences on trust in a human-robot teaming task. The t...
Thesis: S.M., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Department of Electrical Engineering and Comput...
Becoming a well-functioning team requires continuous collaborative learning by all team members. Thi...
Human and robot partners increasingly need to work together to perform tasks as a team. Robots desig...
As robots become more ubiquitous, they will increasingly need to behave as our team partners and smo...
Systematic analysis of the mechanisms of physical human-human interaction (pHHI) requires adequate c...
Abstract: A crucial skill for fluent action meshing in human team activity is a learned and calculat...
International audienceThis paper proposes a new decision-making framework in the context of Human-Ro...
Human-in-the-loop robot control systems naturally provide the means for synergistic human-robot col...
We present a framework for automatically learning human user models from joint-action demonstrations...
As robots become more common in our daily lives, they will be expected to interact with and work wit...
While much work in human-robot interaction has focused on leaderfollower teamwork models, the recent...
To make the cooperation within a physical human-robot team as efficient as possible, the team member...
This data was gathered in an experiment with the aim of studying mutual adaptations in a human-robot...
We are interested in asymmetric human-robot teams, where a human supervisor occasionally takes over ...
We present the effect of adapting to human preferences on trust in a human-robot teaming task. The t...
Thesis: S.M., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Department of Electrical Engineering and Comput...
Becoming a well-functioning team requires continuous collaborative learning by all team members. Thi...
Human and robot partners increasingly need to work together to perform tasks as a team. Robots desig...
As robots become more ubiquitous, they will increasingly need to behave as our team partners and smo...
Systematic analysis of the mechanisms of physical human-human interaction (pHHI) requires adequate c...
Abstract: A crucial skill for fluent action meshing in human team activity is a learned and calculat...
International audienceThis paper proposes a new decision-making framework in the context of Human-Ro...
Human-in-the-loop robot control systems naturally provide the means for synergistic human-robot col...
We present a framework for automatically learning human user models from joint-action demonstrations...
As robots become more common in our daily lives, they will be expected to interact with and work wit...