What Is My Robot Thinking? Design Considerations for Transparent and Trustworthy Shared Autonomy

June 05, 2026 ยท Grace Period ยท ๐Ÿ› IROS 2026

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Authors Atharv Belsare, Zohre Karimi, Connor Mattson, Rushiil Nakka, Daniel S. Brown arXiv ID 2606.06870 Category cs.RO: Robotics Citations 0 Venue IROS 2026
Abstract
Assistive robots operating under shared autonomy must balance user control with autonomous assistance. Because robot actions depend on internal intent inference that is not directly observable, mismatches between inferred and intended goals can undermine coordination and trust. We investigate how interface-level transparency, including feedback modality (visual vs. auditory) and information richness (sparse vs. rich), shapes interaction in a vision-based shared autonomy system. In a user study with N=25 participants across two assistive manipulation tasks, we evaluate how these designs influence coordination and trust. Providing feedback significantly improves intent alignment and reduces corrective intervention, indicating that making the inferred goal legible accelerates convergence in shared control. Participants preferred visual over auditory feedback, while preferences for sparse versus rich information depended on task complexity. We also found that revealing the full belief distribution did not consistently improve alignment or trust. Together, these findings indicate that effective transparency enhances coordination primarily through goal legibility, while trust depends on task-appropriate information exposure rather than maximal disclosure. Based on these results, we outline guidelines for designing transparent shared autonomy systems.
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