2,752 research outputs found
Human interaction dynamics for its use in mobile robotics: Impedance control for leader-follower formation
A complete characterization of the behavior in human-robot interactions (HRI) includes both: the behavioral dynamics and the control laws that characterize how the behavior is regulated with the perception data. In this way, this work proposes a leader-follower coordinate control based on an impedance control that allows to establish a dynamic relation between social forces and motion error. For this, a scheme is presented to identify the impedance based on fictitious social forces, which are described by distance-based potential fields. As part of the validation procedure, we present an experimental comparison to select the better of two different fictitious force structures. The criteria are determined by two qualities: least impedance errors during the validation procedure and least parameter variance during the recursive estimation procedure. Finally, with the best fictitious force and its identified impedance, an impedance control is designed for a mobile robot Pioneer 3AT, which is programmed to follow a human in a structured scenario. According to results, and under the hypothesis that moving like humans will be acceptable by humans, it is believed that the proposed control improves the social acceptance of the robot for this kind of interaction.Fil: Herrera Anda, Daniel Esteban. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Centro Científico Tecnológico Conicet - San Juan. Instituto de Automática. Universidad Nacional de San Juan. Facultad de Ingeniería. Instituto de Automática; ArgentinaFil: Roberti, Flavio. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Centro Científico Tecnológico Conicet - San Juan. Instituto de Automática. Universidad Nacional de San Juan. Facultad de Ingeniería. Instituto de Automática; ArgentinaFil: Toibero, Juan Marcos. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Centro Científico Tecnológico Conicet - San Juan. Instituto de Automática. Universidad Nacional de San Juan. Facultad de Ingeniería. Instituto de Automática; ArgentinaFil: Carelli Albarracin, Ricardo Oscar. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Centro Científico Tecnológico Conicet - San Juan. Instituto de Automática. Universidad Nacional de San Juan. Facultad de Ingeniería. Instituto de Automática; Argentin
Issues, concerns, and initial implementation results for space based telerobotic control
Telerobotic control for space based assembly and servicing tasks presents many problems in system design. Traditional force reflection teleoperation schemes are not well suited to this application, and the approaches to compliance control via computer algorithms have yet to see significant testing and comparison. These observations are discussed in detail, as well as the concerns they raise for imminent design and testing of space robotic systems. As an example of the detailed technical work yet to be done before such systems can be specified, a particular approach to providing manipulator compliance is examined experimentally and through modeling and analysis. This yields some initial insight into the limitations and design trade-offs for this class of manipulator control schemes. Implications of this investigation for space based telerobots are discussed in detail
Trajectory Deformations from Physical Human-Robot Interaction
Robots are finding new applications where physical interaction with a human
is necessary: manufacturing, healthcare, and social tasks. Accordingly, the
field of physical human-robot interaction (pHRI) has leveraged impedance
control approaches, which support compliant interactions between human and
robot. However, a limitation of traditional impedance control is that---despite
provisions for the human to modify the robot's current trajectory---the human
cannot affect the robot's future desired trajectory through pHRI. In this
paper, we present an algorithm for physically interactive trajectory
deformations which, when combined with impedance control, allows the human to
modulate both the actual and desired trajectories of the robot. Unlike related
works, our method explicitly deforms the future desired trajectory based on
forces applied during pHRI, but does not require constant human guidance. We
present our approach and verify that this method is compatible with traditional
impedance control. Next, we use constrained optimization to derive the
deformation shape. Finally, we describe an algorithm for real time
implementation, and perform simulations to test the arbitration parameters.
Experimental results demonstrate reduction in the human's effort and
improvement in the movement quality when compared to pHRI with impedance
control alone
On-line Joint Limit Avoidance for Torque Controlled Robots by Joint Space Parametrization
This paper proposes control laws ensuring the stabilization of a time-varying
desired joint trajectory, as well as joint limit avoidance, in the case of
fully-actuated manipulators. The key idea is to perform a parametrization of
the feasible joint space in terms of exogenous states. It follows that the
control of these states allows for joint limit avoidance. One of the main
outcomes of this paper is that position terms in control laws are replaced by
parametrized terms, where joint limits must be avoided. Stability and
convergence of time-varying reference trajectories obtained with the proposed
method are demonstrated to be in the sense of Lyapunov. The introduced control
laws are verified by carrying out experiments on two degrees-of-freedom of the
humanoid robot iCub.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures. Submitted to the 2016 IEEE-RAS International
Conference on Humanoid Robot
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