JOURNAL ARTICLE

Towards using Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs) in Wilderness Search and Rescue

Michael A. GoodrichBryan S. MorseCameron EnghJoseph L. CooperJulie A. Adams

Year: 2009 Journal:   Interaction Studies Social Behaviour and Communication in Biological and Artificial Systems Vol: 10 (3)Pages: 453-478   Publisher: John Benjamins Publishing Company

Abstract

Wilderness Search and Rescue (WiSAR) is the process of finding and assisting persons who are lost in remote wilderness areas. Because such areas are often rugged or relatively inaccessible, searching for missing persons can take huge amounts of time and resources. Camera-equipped mini-Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs) have the potential for speeding up the search process by enabling searchers to view aerial video of an area of interest while closely coordinating with nearby ground searchers. In this paper, we report on lessons learned by trying to use UAVs to support WiSAR. Our research methodology has relied heavily on field trials involving searches conducted under the direction of practicing search and rescue personnel but using simulated missing persons. Lessons from these field trials include the immediate importance of seeing things well in the video, the field need for defining and supporting various roles in the search team, role-specific needs like supporting systematic search by providing a visualization tool to represent the quality of the search, and the on-going need to better support interactions between ground and video searchers. Surprisingly to us, sophisticated autonomous search patterns were less critical than we anticipated, though advances in video enhancement and visualizing search progress, as well as ongoing work to model the likely location of a missing person, open up the possibility of closing the loop between UAV path-planning, search quality, and the likely location of a moving missing person. Keywords: Unmanned Aerial Vehicles, Wilderness Search and Rescue, Human–Robot Interaction, Human Factors, Field Robotics, Graphical User Interfaces

Keywords:
Search and rescue Wilderness Computer science Process (computing) Wilderness area Field (mathematics) Drone Robotics Quality (philosophy) Artificial intelligence Human–computer interaction Robot

Metrics

66
Cited By
3.79
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
0
Refs
0.95
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
Is in top 10%

Citation History

Topics

Robotics and Sensor-Based Localization
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Aerospace Engineering
Robotic Path Planning Algorithms
Physical Sciences →  Computer Science →  Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition
UAV Applications and Optimization
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Aerospace Engineering

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