An examination of the STRIPE vehicle teleoperation system - Robotics Institute Carnegie Mellon University

An examination of the STRIPE vehicle teleoperation system

J. S. Kay and Chuck Thorpe
Conference Paper, Proceedings of (IROS) IEEE/RSJ International Conference on Intelligent Robots and Systems, Vol. 2, pp. 1152 - 1157, September, 1997

Abstract

This paper describes a series of quantitative studies of a user interface for robot vehicle teleoperation. Supervised telerobotics using incremental polyhedral Earth geometry (STRIPE) is a teleoperation system for a robot vehicle that allows a human operator to accurately control the remote vehicle across very low bandwidth communication links, and communication links with large delays. In STRIPE, a single image from a camera mounted on the vehicle is transmitted to the operator workstation. The operator uses a mouse to pick a series of "waypoints" in the image that define a path that the vehicle should follow. These 2D waypoints are then transmitted back to the vehicle, where they are used to compute the appropriate steering commands while the next image is being transmitted. STRIPE requires no advance knowledge of the terrain to be traversed. This paper describes a series of tests of the STRIPE system. Conditions tested include different graphical interfaces, bandwidths, lenses, and rates of image compression.

BibTeX

@conference{Kay-1997-14474,
author = {J. S. Kay and Chuck Thorpe},
title = {An examination of the STRIPE vehicle teleoperation system},
booktitle = {Proceedings of (IROS) IEEE/RSJ International Conference on Intelligent Robots and Systems},
year = {1997},
month = {September},
volume = {2},
pages = {1152 - 1157},
}