Implications of Personality on Cognitive Workload, Affect, and Task Performance in Robot Remote Control

Go-Eum Cha, Wonse Jo, Byung-Cheol Min

This paper explores how the personality traits of robot operators can impact their task performance during remote control of robots. The influence of personal dispositions on information processing, either directly or indirectly, needs to be examined when working with robots on specific tasks. To investigate this relationship, we utilize the open-access multi-modal dataset MOCAS to examine the operator's personality, affect, cognitive load, and task performance. Our objective is to confirm if personal traits have a total effect, including both direct and indirect effects, that could significantly impact operator performance level. We specifically examine the relationship between personality traits such as extroversion, conscientiousness, and agreeableness, and task performance. We analyze the correlation between cognitive load, self-ratings of workload and affect, and the quantified individual personality traits and their experimental scores. As a result, we confirm that personality traits have no total effect on task performance.

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