In collaborative robotics, efficiency and user experience play a central role. This study looks at how perceived performance differs from measured performance when comparing two ways of controlling industrial robots: traditional teaching pendants and wearable EMG-based gesture control. A Myo Armband was used as an accessible 8-channel EMG platform, and three experiments were carried out on a Universal Robots UR10e to test pick-and-place tasks and precision positioning. Time and accuracy data were gathered together with blind feedback from 13 participants through a multi-criteria analysis framework. Even though the teaching pendant turned out to be more accurate in every scenario, 85% of participants still rated gesture control higher in overall satisfaction. These results point to a notable gap between what users perceive and how they actually perform and suggest that user experience deserves more weight in the design of future robot control interfaces.
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Robert Kristof
Valentin Ciupe
Erwin-Christian Lovasz
Actuators
Polytechnic University of Timişoara
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Kristof et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69d896046c1944d70ce07368 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/act15040210