Choosing the Task Allocator: Effect on Performance and Satisfaction in Human-Agent Team

Sami Abuhaimed, Selim Karaoglu, S. Sen
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Abstract

Ad hoc human-agent teams, where team members interact without prior experience with teammates and only for a limited number of interactions, will be commonplace in dynamic environments with opportunity windows for collaboration between diverse groups. We study the efficacy of virtual ad-hoc teams, consisting of a human and an agent, collaborating to complete tasks in each of a few episodes. To maximize team potential, the relative expertise of team members must be measured and utilized in allocating tasks. As team members are not initially aware of each other's task competence and as humans often cannot accurately estimate their competencies, adapting allocation over the episodes is critical to team performance. Human team member satisfaction with allocations is also critical to determining team viability. We therefore use both these criteria to measure the effectiveness of task allocation procedures with varying degree of flexibility and human teammate control: (a) alternating, (b) performance adaptive, (c) agent-guided, (d) human-selected. We report on the relative strengths of these allocation procedures based on results from experiments with MTurk workers.
任务分配器的选择:对人代理团队绩效和满意度的影响
特别的人类代理团队,团队成员在没有团队成员之前的经验的情况下进行交互,并且只进行有限的交互,将在动态环境中普遍存在,这些环境具有不同群体之间协作的机会窗口。我们研究了由一个人和一个代理组成的虚拟特设团队的效率,他们合作完成每一集的任务。为了最大化团队潜力,必须衡量团队成员的相关专业知识,并在分配任务时加以利用。由于团队成员最初并不知道彼此的任务能力,而且人类通常不能准确地估计他们的能力,因此在情节中调整分配对团队绩效至关重要。人类团队成员对分配的满意度也是决定团队生存能力的关键因素。因此,我们使用这两个标准来衡量具有不同程度灵活性和人类队友控制的任务分配程序的有效性:(a)交替,(b)性能自适应,(c)代理引导,(d)人类选择。我们根据对土耳其工人的实验结果报告了这些分配程序的相对优势。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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