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Fluency---described as the ``coordinated meshing of joint activities between members of a well-synchronized team''---is essential to human-robot team success. Human teams achieve fluency through rich, often mostly implicit, communication. A key challenge in bridging the gap between industry and academia is understanding what influences human perception of a fluent team experience to better optimize human-robot fluency in industrial environments. This paper addresses this challenge by developing an online experiment featuring videos that vary the timing of human and robot actions to influence perceived team fluency. Our results support three broad conclusions. First, we did not see differences across most subjective fluency measures. Second, people report interactions as more fluent as teammates stay more active. Third, reducing delays when humans' tasks depend on robots increases perceived team fluency.more » « less
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