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Main Authors: Long-fei, Chen, Nakamura, Yuichi, Kondo, Kazuaki
Format: Preprint
Published: 2019
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/1906.04002
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author Long-fei, Chen
Nakamura, Yuichi
Kondo, Kazuaki
author_facet Long-fei, Chen
Nakamura, Yuichi
Kondo, Kazuaki
contents With respect to machine operation tasks, the experiences from different skill level operators, especially novices, can provide worthy understanding about the manner in which they perceive the operational environment and formulate knowledge to deal with various operation situations. In this study, we describe the operator's behaviors by utilizing the relations among their head, hand, and operation location (hotspot) during the operation. A total of 40 experiences associated with a sewing machine operation task performed by amateur operators was recorded via a head-mounted RGB-D camera. We examined important features of operational behaviors in different skill level operators and confirmed their correlation to the difficulties of the operation steps. The result shows that the pure-gazing behavior is significantly reduced when the operator's skill improved. Moreover, the hand-approaching duration and the frequency of attention movement before operation are strongly correlated to the operational difficulty in such machine operating environments.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_1906_04002
institution arXiv
publishDate 2019
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Detecting Clues for Skill Levels and Machine Operation Difficulty from Egocentric Vision
Long-fei, Chen
Nakamura, Yuichi
Kondo, Kazuaki
Human-Computer Interaction
Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition
With respect to machine operation tasks, the experiences from different skill level operators, especially novices, can provide worthy understanding about the manner in which they perceive the operational environment and formulate knowledge to deal with various operation situations. In this study, we describe the operator's behaviors by utilizing the relations among their head, hand, and operation location (hotspot) during the operation. A total of 40 experiences associated with a sewing machine operation task performed by amateur operators was recorded via a head-mounted RGB-D camera. We examined important features of operational behaviors in different skill level operators and confirmed their correlation to the difficulties of the operation steps. The result shows that the pure-gazing behavior is significantly reduced when the operator's skill improved. Moreover, the hand-approaching duration and the frequency of attention movement before operation are strongly correlated to the operational difficulty in such machine operating environments.
title Detecting Clues for Skill Levels and Machine Operation Difficulty from Egocentric Vision
topic Human-Computer Interaction
Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition
url https://arxiv.org/abs/1906.04002