Abstract

Collective robotic systems are biologically inspired and advantageous due to their apparent global intelligence and emergent behaviors. Many applications can benefit from the incorporation of collectives, including environmental monitoring, disaster response missions, and infrastructure support. Transparency research has primarily focused on how the design of the models, visualizations, and control mechanisms influence human-collective interactions. Traditionally most transparency research has evaluated one system design element. This article analyzed two models and visualizations to understand how the system design elements impacted human-collective interactions, to quantify which model and visualization combination provided the best transparency, and provide design guidance, based on remote supervision of collectives. The consensus decision-making and baseline models, as well as an individual collective entity and abstract visualizations, were analyzed for sequential best-of- n decision-making tasks involving four collectives, composed of 200 entities each. Both models and visualizations provided transparency and influenced human-collective interactions differently. No single combination provided the best transparency.

Full Text
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