You could be taking orders from Honda's Asimo someday if we are to go by this report |
It must be an ego problem....
Research coming out of MIT confirms that in a two-human, one-robot team working toward a common goal, the humans would rather the robot be in charge.
Not only do human participants prefer taking robo-orders when it comes to tackling a manufacturing task, but the robot ended up leading the team in a more productive manner than the humans could.
The fully-autonomous condition
proved to be not only the most effective for the task, but also the
method preferred by human workers. The workers were more likely to say
that the robots “better understood them” and “improved the efficiency of
the team.”
[Project lead Matthew] Gombolay
emphasizes that giving robots control doesn’t mean a team of cyborgs
will be running the show. It means the tasks are delegated, scheduled,
and coordinated via a human-generated algorithm.
You can see how the various setups compare against each other in the data below. The team's two hypotheses are confirmed: that the level of automation in a system greatly affects efficiency, and that people want to be involved without the burdens of small management decisions.
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