KMi Seminars
Human and Robot Exploration on Mars or Moon
This event took place on Tuesday 09 November 2004 at 14:15

 
Dr Maarten Sierhuis Human-Centered Computing, NASA Ames Research Center, Moffett Field, USA

With the recent exciting events of NASA?s Mars Exploration Rovers and President Bush?s announcement for NASA to return to the Moon as a stepping stone for going to Mars with humans and robots, the debate about why we should send humans to do the scientific exploration on extra-terrestrial planetary surfaces is again upfront and central. Can robots explore? Are the MER rovers really geologists on Mars, or is geology still performed by the scientists on Earth? What would it mean for humans to explore Mars? How would robots and humans work together? How will the astronaut geologist collaborate with his or her colleagues on Earth? These are but some of the questions that are now going to be seriously considered at NASA.

At NASA Ames, in particular in the Work Systems Design & Evaluation group, we have been asking these questions for more than five years. We have studied today?s geology scientists in the field in order to understand what they do and why they do things the way they do. We have studied them on Devon Island in the High Arctic, and in the dessert in Utah. We have also done detailed studies of the work processes for the Apollo missions, the only time humans were actually on an extra-terrestrial surface. Based on these ethnographic field studies, we are developing human-centered software systems that support the astronaut geologist in living and working on Mars, collaborating with remote scientists back on Earth and working together with robots in the field.

In this talk I will give an overview of some of the issues concerning human and robot exploration and will present our work on the Mobile Agents Project during this year?s (April-May 2004) two-week field test at the Mars Dessert Research Station, located in the Utah desert near Hanksville, Utah. For this year?s field test we collaborated with both researchers from KMi at the Open University and the ECS group at the University of Southampton.

PowerPoint Presentation (HMTL Exported Slides)

Screen movies of the UK/US Remote Science Team:
  • How the RST Facilitator at the OU helped the RST by publishing a Portal Map with only the key information needed (26 mins):
    Making_a_Compendium_RST_PortalMap.mov (29.3Mb)
  • Quick introduction to the tools that the RST is about to use in an online meeting (45 secs):
    href="http://stadium.open.ac.uk/podium/documents/20041107_maarten_slides/Pre-RST-meeting-tool-check.mov" target="blank">Pre-RST-meeting-tool-check.mov (2.5Mb)
  • Navigating around the Meeting Replay tool (1min 49secs):
    NASA-MeetingReplay.mov (3.6Mb)
(The above movies have large dimensions and maybe difficult to view on small screens)

Related Links

Maarten Sierhuis
Crew 29 at the Mars Desert Research Stattion
Agent iSolutions
Computational Sciences Division, NASA Ames

 
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Multimedia and Information Systems is...


Multimedia and Information Systems
Our research is centred around the theme of Multimedia Information Retrieval, ie, Video Search Engines, Image Databases, Spoken Document Retrieval, Music Retrieval, Query Languages and Query Mediation.

We focus on content-based information retrieval over a wide range of data spanning form unstructured text and unlabelled images over spoken documents and music to videos. This encompasses the modelling of human perception of relevance and similarity, the learning from user actions and the up-to-date presentation of information. Currently we are building a research version of an integrated multimedia information retrieval system MIR to be used as a research prototype. We aim for a system that understands the user's information need and successfully links it to the appropriate information sources, be it a report or a TV news clip. This work is guided by the vision that an automated knowledge extraction system ultimately empowers people making efficient use of information sources without the burden of filing data into specialised databases.

Visit the MMIS website