Formalizing and Guaranteeing* Human-Robot Interaction
Abstract
Robot capabilities are maturing across domains, from self-driving cars, to bipeds and drones. As a result, robots will soon no longer be confined to safety-controlled industrial settings; instead, they will directly interact with the general public. The growing field of Human-Robot Interaction (HRI) studies various aspects of this scenario - from social norms to joint action to human-robot teams and more. Researchers in HRI have made great strides in developing models, methods, and algorithms for robots acting with and around humans, but these "computational HRI" models and algorithms generally do not come with formal guarantees and constraints on their operation. To enable human-interactive robots to move from the lab to real-world deployments, we must address this gap. This article provides an overview of verification, validation and synthesis techniques used to create demonstrably trustworthy systems, describes several HRI domains that could benefit from such techniques, and provides a roadmap for the challenges and the research needed to create formalized and guaranteed human-robot interaction.
Keywords
Cite
@article{arxiv.2006.16732,
title = {Formalizing and Guaranteeing* Human-Robot Interaction},
author = {Hadas Kress-Gazit and Kerstin Eder and Guy Hoffman and Henny Admoni and Brenna Argall and Ruediger Ehlers and Christoffer Heckman and Nils Jansen and Ross Knepper and Jan Křetínský and Shelly Levy-Tzedek and Jamy Li and Todd Murphey and Laurel Riek and Dorsa Sadigh},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2006.16732},
year = {2021}
}