Issues in Human/Robot Task Structuring and Teaching
Joe Saunders,Nuno Otero,Chrystopher L. Nehaniv +2 more
- 01 Aug 2007
- pp 708-713
TL;DR: The results suggest that although the two tasks are quite distinct in their level of complexity a common thread can be observed: people tend to underspecify their teaching.
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Abstract: Teaching a robot new skills may require that the teacher scaffolds the teaching experience appropriately. However, due to inherent assumptions made by a human teacher the scaffolding process may in some circumstances fail to effectively teach the robot. Here we illustrate this issue in two simple robot teaching exploratory studies and examine the assumptions made by the teacher when teaching the robot. In the first study the human teacher had to reason about robot perceived states in order to provide suitable teaching. In the second study the human teachers had to understand the perceptual constraints of the robot based on the instructions given beforehand by the experimenter and subsequently adapt the guidance given. The results suggest that although the two tasks are quite distinct in their level of complexity a common thread can be observed: people tend to underspecify their teaching. It seems that steps of the explanation are assumed to be known and skipped or not even considered at all. We reflect on the possibility that one of the major challenges in designing robots that are capable interaction partners in these teaching situations is to be able to make them communicate their internal state and current capabilities effectively. Furthermore, we also reflect on designing appropriate behavioral primitives for the robot, corresponding implications on the level of task description and for benefiting from human teaching.
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Citations
•Proceedings Article
Robot Programming by Demonstration with Crowdsourced Action Fixes
Maxwell Forbes,Michael Jae-Yoon Chung,Maya Cakmak,Rajesh P. N. Rao +3 more
- 05 Sep 2014
TL;DR: This paper proposes a PbD framework in which the end-user provides an initial seed demonstration, and then the robot searches for scenarios inWhich the action will not work and requests the crowd to fix the action for these scenarios.
Human to robot demonstrations of routine home tasks: exploring the role of the robot's feedback
Nuno Otero,Aris Alissandrakis,Kerstin Dautenhahn,Chrystopher L. Nehaniv,Dag Sverre Syrdal,Kheng Lee Koay +5 more
- 12 Mar 2008
TL;DR: The role of the robot's feedback on a human teacher's demonstration of a routine home task and the need to investigate design strategies to elicit people's knowledge about the task and also successfully advertize the machine's abilities in order to promote people's ability to provide appropriate demonstrations are studied.
26
Teaching robot companions: the role of scaffolding and event structuring
TL;DR: The experimental results illustrate that the way in which teaching is carried out, and primarily how the teaching steps are decomposed, has a critical effect on the efficiency of human teaching and the effectiveness of robot learning.
22
The Impact of Human–Robot Interface Design on the Use of a Learning Robot System
TL;DR: An interface design challenge: How to provide the user with sufficient information about the learned behavior is focused on and significant effects of the type and the quantity of displayed information are shown.
21
•Dissertation
Guided teaching interactions with robots: embodied queries and teaching heuristics
Maya Cakmak
- 17 May 2012
TL;DR: It is shown that everyday human teachers are not naturally optimal from a machine learning perspective, but teaching dance significantly improves their performance, providing promising evidence that human intelligence and flexibility can be leveraged to achieve better sample efficiency when input data to a learning algorithm comes from a human teacher.
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Wizard of Oz studies — why and how
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TL;DR: The focus of the work described in the paper is on the practical execution of the studies and the methodological conclusions drawn on the basis of the authors' experience, and the methods used and the conclusions drawn are of relevance also to other kinds of intelligent interfaces.
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Wizard of Oz studies: why and how
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TL;DR: It is concluded that empirical studies of the unique qualities of man-machine interaction as distinct from general human discourse are required for the development of user-friendly interactive systems.
Learning in Activity
James G. Greeno,Yrjö Engeström +1 more
- 01 Nov 2014
TL;DR: Situative analyses include hypotheses about principles of coordination that support communication and reasoning in activity systems, including construction of meaning and understanding as discussed by the authors, which is a program of research in the learning sciences that I call "situative".
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Reinforcement Learning with Human Teachers: Understanding How People Want to Teach Robots
Andrea L. Thomaz,Guy Hoffman,Cynthia Breazeal +2 more
- 01 Sep 2006
TL;DR: An experimental platform with a simulated RL robot is described and an analysis of real-time human teaching behavior found in a study in which untrained subjects taught the robot to perform a new task is presented.