The Robotics Institute
Search the site
RI | Publications | Towards a Model of Agent-Assisted Team Search

Text only version of this site

Towards a Model of Agent-Assisted Team Search
G. Sukthankar, K. Sycara, J.A. Giampapa, C. Burnett, and A. Preece
Proceedings of the Annual Conference of the International Technology Alliance in Network and Information Science, September, 2007.

Jump to: Download | Abstract | Notes | Text Reference | BibTeX Reference

Download [Help]

Adobe portable document format (pdf) [359 KB]

Copyright notice: This material is presented to ensure timely dissemination of scholarly and technical work. Copyright and all rights therein are retained by authors or by other copyright holders. All persons copying this information are expected to adhere to the terms and constraints invoked by each author's copyright. These works may not be reposted without the explicit permission of the copyright holder.

Abstract

This paper is the first step in our research plan towards addressing the fundamental question of how software agents can best aid distributed human teams performing time-stressed critical tasks in uncertain and dynamic environments. Based on prior work, we hypothesize that to improve the performance of human teams, agents must do some combination of the following: (1) reduce the cost of the humans’ information processing; (2) decrease uncertainty in the task; (3) improve coordination between team members; (4) directly assist in task completion. In order to (a)establish an experimental baseline of the performance of human-only teams for some particular task domain, and (b) best understand where agents can provide best utility in supporting human teamwork, we designed scenarios and performed experiments with human teams performing a time-stressed, collaborative search task in a multi-player gaming environment. The collaborative search task recreates some of the challenges faced by human teams during search and rescue operations, such as the one described in the Holistan scenario. In our experiments, we analyze (1) verbal communication between team members and (2) the effects of presenting or omitting task progress information. By ascertaining the information processing and coordination requirements of this team task, we expect to identify “insertion points” for agent assistance to human teams. Agent assistance will be particularly critical to military teams as their operations become more agile and situation specific. As unfamiliar forces are brought together for different coalition missions, agent support of teamwork becomes crucial.

Notes

Sponsor: ARL
Grant ID: FA8650-06-C-7606

Associated center: CIMDS
Associated lab/group: Intelligent Software Agents
Associated project: IBM ITA: Human-Agent Teamwork Models

Number of pages: 8

Text Reference

G. Sukthankar, K. Sycara, J.A. Giampapa, C. Burnett, and A. Preece, "Towards a Model of Agent-Assisted Team Search," Proceedings of the Annual Conference of the International Technology Alliance in Network and Information Science, September, 2007.

BibTeX Reference

@inproceedings{Sukthankar_2007_5804,
   author = "Gita Sukthankar and Katia Sycara and Joseph Andrew Giampapa and Christopher Burnett and Alun Preece",
   title = "Towards a Model of Agent-Assisted Team Search",
   booktitle = "Proceedings of the Annual Conference of the International Technology Alliance in Network and Information Science",
   month = "September",
   year = "2007"
}


The Robotics Institute is part of the School of Computer Science, Carnegie Mellon University.
For updates and comments, please see these instructions.
This page maintained by robotwebmaster@ri.cmu.edu