<div class="csl-bib-body">
<div class="csl-entry">Heidersberger, J. S., Kaiser, J., Jadav, S. V., Mihić Zidar, L., Curioni, A., Johannsen, L., & Lee, D. (2025). Partner familiarity enhances performance in a manual precision task. <i>Scientific Reports</i>, <i>15</i>(1), Article 23381. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-025-03341-9</div>
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dc.identifier.issn
2045-2322
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dc.identifier.uri
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12708/219328
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dc.description.abstract
Understanding human collaborative behavior in tasks with physical interaction is essential for advancing physical human-robot collaboration. Investigating how individuals learn to collaborate over repeated interactions can provide valuable insights for developing robotic agents capable of gradually improving coordination and collaboration performance. Therefore, this study investigated learning behavior in a high-precision task over repeated haptic collaboration. Specifically, we examined if learned collaboration behavior is partner-specific, what collaboration strategies are developed, and if interpersonal differences affect collaboration. Our results indicate that repeated physical collaboration with the same partner allowed for immediate high performance with a familiar partner in subsequent collaborations, whereas adapting to an unfamiliar partner required retraining. Participants used partner-specific collaboration behaviors—in terms of motions and forces—that could be retained in subsequent interactions. Collaborators reduced the variability of their arm motions over repeated collaboration, achieving higher performance, likely due to increased predictability. Collaboration also enabled knowledge transfer between partners, with individual improvement being enhanced when paired with a better-performing partner. These findings suggest that partners in a collaborative precision task optimize their performance by gradually negotiating a joint action strategy, which is reused in subsequent collaborations with familiar partners and carries over to solo task execution.
en
dc.description.sponsorship
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft e.V
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dc.language.iso
en
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dc.publisher
NATURE PORTFOLIO
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dc.relation.ispartof
Scientific Reports
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dc.subject
Partner familiarity
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dc.subject
Collaborative Learning
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dc.subject
Joint action
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dc.subject
Human-human interaction
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dc.title
Partner familiarity enhances performance in a manual precision task
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dc.type
Article
en
dc.type
Artikel
de
dc.contributor.affiliation
TU Wien, Austria
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dc.contributor.affiliation
RWTH Aachen University, Germany
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dc.relation.grantno
LE 2731/4-2
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dc.type.category
Original Research Article
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tuw.container.volume
15
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tuw.container.issue
1
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tuw.journal.peerreviewed
true
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tuw.peerreviewed
true
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wb.publication.intCoWork
International Co-publication
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tuw.project.title
Plastizität der Körperrepräsentation vom Selbst und dem Anderen in einer kollaborativen Aufgabe