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Now you’re teleoperating with power: learning from video games to improve teleoperation interfaces

Teleoperation has potential applications in the home, industry, and other areas such as search  and rescue. Safe and efficient teleoperation is difficult, however, and improved interaction  design is one way to mitigate the challenges operators encounter. Video games share many  similar challenges to teleoperation in terms of interaction design: both have a user controlling  an entity in a remote space, receiving feedback and sending controls. I investigate how to  improve teleoperation performance and experience by learning from video game interaction  design.  For years, video game developers have been creating interactions in their games (e.g., in game  events, interface elements, and characters) that influence how their players think and act by  leveraging different aspects of human psychology. I investigate how I can take design cues and  inspiration from these psychology-based video game interaction to design, implement, and  evaluate new interaction designs that consider or shape how operators think and act during  teleoperation.  I successfully design and experimentally evaluate a concrete set of video game-inspired  teleoperation techniques from three perspectives: directing operator attention, priming operator  perceptions of robot capability to shape driving behaviour, and using social agents to influence  operator experience and driving behaviour. In addition, I create a framework of video game  interaction design; my framework provides the structure and vocabulary for discussing video  game interactions at an abstract level, which I leverage to showcase the similarities of the  problem spaces, and solutions.

https://mspace.lib.umanitoba.ca/server/api/core/bitstreams/2294cf3f-c8e0-4711-a4fd-8aca5da3984f/content

Daniel J. Rea. 2020. Now you’re teleoperating with power: learning from video games to improve teleoperation interfaces. Ph.D. Thesis (2020). University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, Canada.

Authors

Daniel J. Rea

Daniel J. Rea

Assistant Professor