Prof. Goodrich and Joseph working on a UAV
“Missing Person” in a field trial

Welcome to the HCMI Wiki. HCMI stands for Human Centered Machine Intelligence. The HCMI research lab at the Computer Science Department of Brigham Young University is under the direction of Prof. Michael Goodrich. We believe that the ultimate purpose of intelligent machines (robots and AI systems) is to serve humans. Therefore, it is important for machines to fit in with human environments and human procedures/processes/models. A well-designed and task-appropriate Human-Robot Interaction (HRI) method can improve task performance and allows intelligent machines to better support/facilitate human tasks. Sponsors of current and previous work include the NSF, DARPA, ARL, ONR, and INL.

Current Events

Researcher Profiles

Research Objectives

  • How to support Wilderness Search and Rescue operations with UAV technologies?
  • How to apply assistive robotics technologies to help treat children with Autism in clinical settings?
  • Research HRI techniques to improve task performances for human and artificial agents working as a team.
  • Multi-agent management and learning.
  • Probability Maps for lost person behavior to support Wilderness Search and Rescue

Current Projects

thumb|UAV used in research
  • WiSAR Project: WiSAR stands for Wilderness Search and Rescue. This is a joint project with the Computer Vision lab and the MAGICC lab. The goal is to use technology to support Wilderness Search and Rescue operations. In our lab, we are interested in the following topics:
    • Interactive probability distribution
    • Sliding autonomy in UAV path-planning
    • UAV control interface and HRI ideas
    • Incident Support Management System for Heterogeneous Agents
thumb|Therapist-in-the-loop Assitive Robotics
  • TiLAR Project: TiLAR stands for Therapist in the Loop Assistive Robotics. This is a joint project with several other departments in the university (Mechanical Engineering, Communication Disorders, Psychology). The goal is to use Assistive Robotics technologies to help therapists treat children with Autism in clinical settings. In our lab, we are interested in the following topics:
    • Identify traits of the robots (form, shape, functions, etc.) that affect autistic children's behaviors.
    • Design human-robot interfaces that enable the therapists to choreograph (“program”) a robot's behaviors.
  • HuBIRT: HuBIRT stands for Human-interaction with Bio-Inspired Robot Teams. This is a joint project with the University of Central Florida, the University of Pittsburgh, Carnegie Mellon University, and the University of Porto.
  • Tele-operation of a robotic arm with augmented virtual reality

Community Pages

Blogs, human-factors videos, etc

Getting started

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hcmi/start.txt · Last modified: 2016/05/09 14:25 by bryantc2
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