The Effect of Predictive Formal Modelling at Runtime on Performance in Human-Swarm Interaction
Authors: Abioye, A.O., Hunt, W., Gu, Y., Schneiders, E., Naiseh, M., Fischer, J.E., Ramchurn, S.D., Soorati, M.D., Archibald, B. and Sevegnani, M.
Journal: ACM/IEEE International Conference on Human-Robot Interaction
Pages: 172-176
eISSN: 2167-2148
DOI: 10.1145/3610978.3640725
Abstract:Formal Modelling is often used as part of the design and testing process of software development to ensure that components operate within suitable bounds even in unexpected circumstances. In this paper, we use predictive formal modelling (PFM) at runtime in a human-swarm mission and show that this integration can be used to improve the performance of human-swarm teams. We recruited 60 participants to operate a simulated aerial swarm to deliver parcels to target locations. In the PFM condition, operators were informed of the estimated completion times given the number of drones deployed, whereas, in the No-PFM condition, operators did not have this information. The operators could control the mission by adding or removing drones from the mission and thereby, increasing or decreasing the overall mission cost. The evaluation of human-swarm performance relied on four metrics: the task completion time, the number of agents, the number of completed tasks, and the cost per task. Our results show that PFM modelling at runtime improves mission performance without significantly affecting the operator's workload or the system's usability.
https://eprints.bournemouth.ac.uk/39774/
Source: Scopus
The Effect of Predictive Formal Modelling at Runtime on Performance in Human-Swarm Interaction
Authors: Abioye, A.O., Hunt, W., Gu, Y., Schneiders, E., Naiseh, M., Fischer, J.E., Ramchurn, S.D., Soorati, M.D., Archibald, B. and Sevegnani, M.
Pages: 172-176
Publisher: Association for Computing Machinery
Place of Publication: New York
ISBN: 9798400703232
Abstract:Formal Modelling is often used as part of the design and testing process of software development to ensure that components operate within suitable bounds even in unexpected circumstances. In this paper, we use predictive formal modelling (PFM) at runtime in a human-swarm mission and show that this integration can be used to improve the performance of human-swarm teams. We recruited 60 participants to operate a simulated aerial swarm to deliver parcels to target locations. In the PFM condition, operators were informed of the estimated completion times given the number of drones deployed, whereas, in the No-PFM condition, operators did not have this information. The operators could control the mission by adding or removing drones from the mission and thereby, increasing or decreasing the overall mission cost. The evaluation of human-swarm performance relied on four metrics: the task completion time, the number of agents, the number of completed tasks, and the cost per task. Our results show that PFM modelling at runtime improves mission performance without significantly affecting the operator's workload or the system's usability.
https://eprints.bournemouth.ac.uk/39774/
Source: BURO EPrints