Safe and robust approach to shared-control via dialogue

Bernd Krieg-Bruckner, Hui Shi, Robert J. Ross

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

In shared-control systems, such as intelligent service robots, a human operator and an automated technical system are interdependently in charge of control. Effective shared control requires complex system architectures that provide safety and robustness in operation, while providing a user-friendly interface-provision of these dual requirements is a non-trivial task. This paper reports on an approach to addressing these issues. A dialogue centric cognitive control architecture is presented, which utilizes both agent-oriented programming and formal methods. The SharC Cognitive Control Architecture is a hybrid design that distributes control of a robot amongst a community of deliberative intentional agents. Since safety is of paramount importance in shared-control systems, high-level safety issues must be addressed within such architectures. To this end, the authors also describe a formally modeled dialogue manager that sits at the heart of the control system. The use of these distinct software paradigms is illustrated, by example, with the demonstration platform: Rolland, the Bremen autonomous wheelchair.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1764-1775
Number of pages12
JournalRuan Jian Xue Bao/Journal of Software
Volume15
Issue number12
Publication statusPublished - Dec 2004
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Agent-oriented programming
  • Cognitive control architecture
  • Formal method
  • Hybrid design
  • Shared-control

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