Data underlying the study on the effects of task allocation using human’s willingness in trust and teamwork.

DOI:10.4121/cf001058-c030-49f7-a888-0baca83a959e.v1
The DOI displayed above is for this specific version of this dataset, which is currently the latest. Newer versions may be published in the future. For a link that will always point to the latest version, please use
DOI: 10.4121/cf001058-c030-49f7-a888-0baca83a959e

Datacite citation style

Centeio Jorge, Carolina; C.M. (Catholijn) Jonker; Tielman, Myrthe (2025): Data underlying the study on the effects of task allocation using human’s willingness in trust and teamwork. Version 1. 4TU.ResearchData. dataset. https://doi.org/10.4121/cf001058-c030-49f7-a888-0baca83a959e.v1
Other citation styles (APA, Harvard, MLA, Vancouver, Chicago, IEEE) available at Datacite

Dataset

As machines’ autonomy increases, their capacity to learn and adapt to humans in collaborative scenarios increases too. In particular, machines can use artificial trust (AT) to make decisions, such as task and role allocation/selection. However, the outcome of such decisions and the way these are communicated can affect the human’s trust, which in turn affects how the human collaborates too. With the goal of maintaining mutual appropriate trust between the human and the machine in mind, we ran a user study to investigate the role of task-based willingness (e.g. human preferences on tasks) and its communication in AT-based decision-making. This user study involved the interaction with a 2D grid-world where the participants interacted and collaborated with an artificial agent. During the experiment, objective metrics were collected. Both before the experiment and after each interaction subjective metrics (through questionnaires) and answers to open questions were also collected. We share the data collected and used in our analysis in this repository.

This data is used for the publication "I Know You're Capable, But Are You Willing?": Allocating Tasks in Human-Machine Teams.


History

  • 2025-10-03 first online, published, posted

Publisher

4TU.ResearchData

Format

csv

Funding

  • Hybrid Intelligence (HI): augmenting human intellect (grant code 024.004.022) [more info...] Dutch Research Council

Organizations

TU Delft, Faculty of Electrical Engineering, Mathematics and Computer Science (EEMCS), Department of Intelligent Systems

DATA - under embargo

The files in this dataset are under embargo until 2026-03-01.

Reason

We would like to keep the files hidden until the publication of our results to avoid copy. After that, all the files can be shared freely.