학술논문

SIREN: Underwater Robot-to-Human Communication Using Audio
Document Type
Periodical
Source
IEEE Robotics and Automation Letters IEEE Robot. Autom. Lett. Robotics and Automation Letters, IEEE. 8(10):6139-6146 Oct, 2023
Subject
Robotics and Control Systems
Computing and Processing
Components, Circuits, Devices and Systems
Robots
Hardware
Software
Transducers
Symbols
XML
Task analysis
Field robots
human-robot collaboration
marine robotics
Language
ISSN
2377-3766
2377-3774
Abstract
In this letter, we present SIREN: a novel audio-based communication system for underwater human-robot interaction. SIREN utilizes a surface transducer to produce sound by vibrating the frame of an underwater robot, essentially turning the robot's outer surface into the vibrating membrane of a speaker. We employ this hardware in two forms of robot-to-human communication: synthesized text-to-speech (TTS-sonemes) and synthesized musical indicators (Tone-sonemes). To profile the system's capabilities with respect to underwater communication, we perform a substantial in-person human study with 12 participants. In this study, participants were trained on the use of one of the previously mentioned audio communication systems. Participants were then asked to identify the communication from their system in a pool at various distances. This study's results demonstrate that sound is a viable method of underwater communication. TTS-Sonemes outperform Tonal-Sonemes at close distances but fail at further distances, while Tonal-Sonemes remain recognizable as the distance to the robot increases.