4.4 Article

The Vicarios Virtual Reality Interface for Remote Robotic Teleoperation: Teleporting for Intuitive Tele-manipulation

Journal

JOURNAL OF INTELLIGENT & ROBOTIC SYSTEMS
Volume 101, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10846-021-01311-7

Keywords

Teleoperation; Teleporting; Telemanipulation; Immersion; Virtual reality; Motion mapping

Funding

  1. Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia
  2. INAIL (Istituto nazionale Assicurazione Infortuni sul Lavoro)
  3. Lighthouse Initiative Geriatronics by StMWi Bayern [5140951]
  4. LongLeif GaPa gGmbH [5140953]

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Intuitive interaction is essential for accurate and effective performance in remote robotic teleoperation. The Vicarios Virtual Reality (VR) interface aims to enhance situational awareness by utilizing immersive visualization and natural action interfaces. User studies show that Vicarios improves performance through its immersive experience and instant user viewpoint changes.
Intuitive interaction is the cornerstone of accurate and effective performance in remote robotic teleoperation. It requires high-fidelity in control actions as well as perception (vision, haptic, and other sensory feedback) of the remote environment. This paper presents Vicarios, a Virtual Reality (VR) based interface with the aim of facilitating intuitive real-time remote teleoperation, while utilizing the inherent benefits of VR, including immersive visualization, freedom of user viewpoint selection, and fluidity of interaction through natural action interfaces. Vicarios aims to enhance the situational awareness, using the concept of viewpoint-independent mapping between the operator and the remote scene, thereby giving the operator better control in the perception-action loop. The article describes the overall system of Vicarios, with its software, hardware, and communication framework. A comparative user study quantifies the impact of the interface and its features, including immersion and instantaneous user viewpoint changes, termed teleporting, on users' performance. The results show that users' performance with the VR-based interface was either similar to or better than the baseline condition of traditional stereo video feedback, approving the realistic nature of the Vicarios interface. Furthermore, including the teleporting feature in VR significantly improved participants' performance and their appreciation for it, which was evident in the post-questionnaire results. Vicarios capitalizes on the intuitiveness and flexibility of VR to improve accuracy in remote teleoperation.

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