TY - JOUR
T1 - Integrating Function Allocation and Operational Event Sequence Diagrams to Support Human-Robot Coordination
T2 - Case Study of a Robotic Date Thinning System
AU - Salzer, Yael
AU - Saraf, Noy
AU - Bechar, Avital
AU - Cohen, Yuval
AU - Schmilovitch, Ze’ev
AU - Berman, Sigal
AU - Yovel, Yossi
AU - Sadowsky, Avraham
AU - Bass, Ellen J.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© Copyright 2023, Human Factors and Ergonomics Society.
PY - 2024/3
Y1 - 2024/3
N2 - State-of-the-art robots show promise in supporting but not completely replacing human work in most precision agriculture applications. For many potential agricultural robot applications, there are no comparable systems nor readily available information on the human operator activities to guide the systems engineering process. Such is the situation for Medjool date thinning, a tedious and hazardous manual operation for which technological assistance has yet to be developed. Here we describe using cognitive system engineering methods to develop operational concepts and human-robot coordination requirements for a pioneer system, a Robotic Medjool Date Thinning System (RDTS). We leveraged the abstraction hierarchy to characterize the RDTS’s envisioned goals and functionality. We developed alternative functional allocations to explore the design space based on the availability of different enabling technologies. After downselecting to the function allocation, including the technologies expected to be developed, we created operational event sequence diagrams to visualize the operation flow and to identify requirements related to the human operator and the joint human-robot system. Applying these methods in the early design stages helped to refine the human-robot coordination requirements and to identify gaps in the operational concept—they show great potential to support the introduction of agricultural robots and bring them to fruition.
AB - State-of-the-art robots show promise in supporting but not completely replacing human work in most precision agriculture applications. For many potential agricultural robot applications, there are no comparable systems nor readily available information on the human operator activities to guide the systems engineering process. Such is the situation for Medjool date thinning, a tedious and hazardous manual operation for which technological assistance has yet to be developed. Here we describe using cognitive system engineering methods to develop operational concepts and human-robot coordination requirements for a pioneer system, a Robotic Medjool Date Thinning System (RDTS). We leveraged the abstraction hierarchy to characterize the RDTS’s envisioned goals and functionality. We developed alternative functional allocations to explore the design space based on the availability of different enabling technologies. After downselecting to the function allocation, including the technologies expected to be developed, we created operational event sequence diagrams to visualize the operation flow and to identify requirements related to the human operator and the joint human-robot system. Applying these methods in the early design stages helped to refine the human-robot coordination requirements and to identify gaps in the operational concept—they show great potential to support the introduction of agricultural robots and bring them to fruition.
KW - abstraction hierarchy
KW - agricultural robots
KW - function allocation
KW - human-robot interaction
KW - operational event sequence diagram
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85175191415&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1177/15553434231199727
DO - 10.1177/15553434231199727
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AN - SCOPUS:85175191415
SN - 1555-3434
VL - 18
SP - 52
EP - 68
JO - Journal of Cognitive Engineering and Decision Making
JF - Journal of Cognitive Engineering and Decision Making
IS - 1
ER -