About Us Our Work Employment News & Events
MITRE Remote Access for MITRE Employees Site Map
Our Work
Share this page

Follow Us On:

Visit MITRE on Facebook
Visit MITRE on Twitter
Visit MITRE on YouTube
View MITRE's RSS Feeds
Home > Our Work > Technical Papers >

Modeling Human-Robot Interaction with GOMS

December 2006

Jill L. Drury, The MITRE Corporation
Jean Scholtz, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
David Kieras, University of Michigan

ABSTRACT

The Goals, Operators, Methods, and Selection rules (GOMS) method is a well-established means of modeling the procedures that humans use to interact with technology. We focus on two questions: what is different about using GOMS for human-robot interaction (HRI) versus using GOMS for traditional computer applications, and what are promising approaches for using GOMS to evaluate competing HRI designs? This paper raises issues in using GOMS for modeling HRI and illustrates them with GOMS models that compare two interfaces for urban search-and-rescue robots. Very little work has been done with GOMS so far in the HRI domain, so one of our chief contributions is the guidance we provide for using GOMS for HRI.

» Download Paper [PDF, 406KB]

Additional Search Keywords

GOMS, human-robot interaction, evaluation, interface design, dialog modeling

 

Page last updated: January 4, 2007   |   Top of page

Homeland Security Center Center for Enterprise Modernization Command, Control, Communications and Intelligence Center Center for Advanced Aviation System Development

 
 
 

Serving as Architects of Information Advantage.™
Copyright © 1997-2009, The MITRE Corporation. All rights reserved.
MITRE is a registered trademark of The MITRE Corporation.
Material on this site may be copied and distributed with permission only.

MITRE Named to FORTUNE's "100 Best Companies to Work For" List for Eighth Straight Year MITRE Named to "Best Places to Work in IT" List for Fifth Consecutive Year
 

Privacy Policy | Contact Us