Persona-Based Process Design for Assistive Human-Robot Workplaces for Persons with Disabilities
Nils Mandischer, Daria Eckert and, Lars Mikelsons
TLDR
This paper introduces a persona-based design approach for human-robot workplaces, enabling adaptive assistance for persons with disabilities.
Key contributions
- Proposes a persona-based design for adaptive human-robot workplaces for persons with disabilities.
- Abstracts common impairments into "personas with disabilities" to inform process design.
- Develops action-specific strategies for each persona, ordered by robot assistance level.
- Implements strategies in a behavior tree for online adaptation to individual user needs.
Why it matters
Current assistive robot systems are too personalized, limiting widespread adoption. This paper simplifies the design of inclusive human-robot workplaces by proposing a persona-based approach. It enables adaptive, universal design, making these systems more accessible and scalable for persons with disabilities.
Original Abstract
Human-robot interaction is emerging as an important paradigm for integrating persons with disabilities into the workplace. While these systems can enable individuals to work, their design is mostly personalized, hindering widespread use beyond the individual user. The universal design paradigm is a central pillar of inclusive design, describing usability of systems by all. To incorporate universal design into process design for human-robot workplaces expert knowledge is required that is often not available. To simplify process design of human-robot workplaces, we propose a persona-based design approach. First, typical impairments prevalent in the workforce or particularly relevant for the processes are abstracted into personas with disabilities. The work process is subdivided into sequential actions. For each action and persona, strategies are developed to reach the action goal by a design thinking approach. The resulting actions are ordered by level of robot assistance, i.e. robot involvement, and implemented in a behavior tree. Therefore, the macro-behavior of the workplace may adapt to individual personas online. We demonstrate the method in a collaborative box folding process with a total of seven personas with disabilities. The persona-based process design shows promising results by generating more comprehensive process strategies while enabling adaptive behavior in the sense of universal design.
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