Publications

Selected Publications

This page shows selected publications from the last years. For a detailed list please refer to the Google Scholar or DBLP page of Stefan Schneegass.

Multiple Ways of Working with Users to Develop Physically Assistive Robots

Type of Publication: Article in Collected Edition

Multiple Ways of Working with Users to Develop Physically Assistive Robots

Author(s):
Nanavati, Amal; Pascher, Max; Ranganeni, Vinitha; Gordon, Ethan K.; Faulkner, Taylor Kessler; Srinivasa, Siddhartha S.; Cakmak, Maya; Alves-Oliveira, Patrícia; Gerken, Jens
Title of Anthology:
A3DE '24: Workshop on Assistive Applications, Accessibility, and Disability Ethics at the ACM/IEEE International Conference on Human-Robot Interaction
Publication Date:
2024
Digital Object Identifier (DOI):
doi:10.48550/arXiv.2403.00489
Fulltext:
Multiple Ways of Working with Users to Develop Physically Assistive Robots (2.59 MB)
Citation:
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Abstract

Despite the growth of physically assistive robotics (PAR) research over the last decade, nearly half of PAR user studies do not involve participants with the target disabilities. There are several reasons for this---recruitment challenges, small sample sizes, and transportation logistics---all influenced by systemic barriers that people with disabilities face. However, it is well-established that working with end-users results in technology that better addresses their needs and integrates with their lived circumstances. In this paper, we reflect on multiple approaches we have taken to working with people with motor impairments across the design, development, and evaluation of three PAR projects: (a) assistive feeding with a robot arm; (b) assistive teleoperation with a mobile manipulator; and (c) shared control with a robot arm. We discuss these approaches to working with users along three dimensions---individual- vs. community-level insight, logistic burden on end-users vs. researchers, and benefit to researchers vs. community---and share recommendations for how other PAR researchers can incorporate users into their work.