319 research outputs found

    Planning Hybrid Driving-Stepping Locomotion on Multiple Levels of Abstraction

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    Navigating in search and rescue environments is challenging, since a variety of terrains has to be considered. Hybrid driving-stepping locomotion, as provided by our robot Momaro, is a promising approach. Similar to other locomotion methods, it incorporates many degrees of freedom---offering high flexibility but making planning computationally expensive for larger environments. We propose a navigation planning method, which unifies different levels of representation in a single planner. In the vicinity of the robot, it provides plans with a fine resolution and a high robot state dimensionality. With increasing distance from the robot, plans become coarser and the robot state dimensionality decreases. We compensate this loss of information by enriching coarser representations with additional semantics. Experiments show that the proposed planner provides plans for large, challenging scenarios in feasible time.Comment: In Proceedings of IEEE International Conference on Robotics and Automation (ICRA), Brisbane, Australia, May 201

    Supervised Autonomous Locomotion and Manipulation for Disaster Response with a Centaur-like Robot

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    Mobile manipulation tasks are one of the key challenges in the field of search and rescue (SAR) robotics requiring robots with flexible locomotion and manipulation abilities. Since the tasks are mostly unknown in advance, the robot has to adapt to a wide variety of terrains and workspaces during a mission. The centaur-like robot Centauro has a hybrid legged-wheeled base and an anthropomorphic upper body to carry out complex tasks in environments too dangerous for humans. Due to its high number of degrees of freedom, controlling the robot with direct teleoperation approaches is challenging and exhausting. Supervised autonomy approaches are promising to increase quality and speed of control while keeping the flexibility to solve unknown tasks. We developed a set of operator assistance functionalities with different levels of autonomy to control the robot for challenging locomotion and manipulation tasks. The integrated system was evaluated in disaster response scenarios and showed promising performance.Comment: In Proceedings of IEEE/RSJ International Conference on Intelligent Robots and Systems (IROS), Madrid, Spain, October 201

    Keep Rollin' - Whole-Body Motion Control and Planning for Wheeled Quadrupedal Robots

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    We show dynamic locomotion strategies for wheeled quadrupedal robots, which combine the advantages of both walking and driving. The developed optimization framework tightly integrates the additional degrees of freedom introduced by the wheels. Our approach relies on a zero-moment point based motion optimization which continuously updates reference trajectories. The reference motions are tracked by a hierarchical whole-body controller which computes optimal generalized accelerations and contact forces by solving a sequence of prioritized tasks including the nonholonomic rolling constraints. Our approach has been tested on ANYmal, a quadrupedal robot that is fully torque-controlled including the non-steerable wheels attached to its legs. We conducted experiments on flat and inclined terrains as well as over steps, whereby we show that integrating the wheels into the motion control and planning framework results in intuitive motion trajectories, which enable more robust and dynamic locomotion compared to other wheeled-legged robots. Moreover, with a speed of 4 m/s and a reduction of the cost of transport by 83 % we prove the superiority of wheeled-legged robots compared to their legged counterparts.Comment: IEEE Robotics and Automation Letter

    Value Iteration Networks on Multiple Levels of Abstraction

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    Learning-based methods are promising to plan robot motion without performing extensive search, which is needed by many non-learning approaches. Recently, Value Iteration Networks (VINs) received much interest since---in contrast to standard CNN-based architectures---they learn goal-directed behaviors which generalize well to unseen domains. However, VINs are restricted to small and low-dimensional domains, limiting their applicability to real-world planning problems. To address this issue, we propose to extend VINs to representations with multiple levels of abstraction. While the vicinity of the robot is represented in sufficient detail, the representation gets spatially coarser with increasing distance from the robot. The information loss caused by the decreasing resolution is compensated by increasing the number of features representing a cell. We show that our approach is capable of solving significantly larger 2D grid world planning tasks than the original VIN implementation. In contrast to a multiresolution coarse-to-fine VIN implementation which does not employ additional descriptive features, our approach is capable of solving challenging environments, which demonstrates that the proposed method learns to encode useful information in the additional features. As an application for solving real-world planning tasks, we successfully employ our method to plan omnidirectional driving for a search-and-rescue robot in cluttered terrain

    Planning Hybrid Driving-Stepping Locomotion for Ground Robots in Challenging Environments

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    Ground robots capable of navigating a wide range of terrains are needed in several domains such as disaster response or planetary exploration. Hybrid driving-stepping locomotion is promising since it combines the complementary strengths of the two locomotion modes. However, suitable platforms require complex kinematic capabilities which need to be considered in corresponding locomotion planning methods. High terrain complexities induce further challenges for the planning problem. We present a search-based hybrid driving-stepping locomotion planning approach for robots which possess a quadrupedal base with legs ending in steerable wheels allowing for omnidirectional driving and stepping. Driving is preferred on sufficiently flat terrain while stepping is considered in the vicinity of obstacles. Steps are handled in a hierarchical manner: while only the connection between suitable footholds is considered during planning, those steps in the resulting path are expanded to detailed motion sequences considering the robot stability. To enable precise locomotion in challenging terrain, the planner takes the individual robot footprint into account. The method is evaluated in simulation and in real-world applications with the robots Momaro and Centauro. The results indicate that the planner provides bounded sub-optimal paths in feasible time. However, the required fine resolution and high-dimensional robot representation result in too large state spaces for more complex scenarios exceeding computation time and memory constraints. To enable the planner to be applicable in those scenarios, the method is extended to incorporate three levels of representation. In the vicinity of the robot, the detailed representation is used to obtain reliable paths for the near future. With increasing distance from the robot, the resolution gets coarser and the degrees of freedom of the robot representation decrease. To compensate this loss of information, those representations are enriched with additional semantics increasing the scene understanding. We further present how the most abstract representation can be used to generate an informed heuristic. Evaluation shows that planning is accelerated by multiple orders of magnitude with comparable result quality. However, manually designing the additional representations and tuning the corresponding cost functions requires a high effort. Therefore, we present a method to support the generation of an abstract representation through a convolutional neural network (CNN). While a low-dimensional, coarse robot representation and corresponding action set can be easily defined, a CNN is trained on artificially generated data to represent the abstract cost function. Subsequently, the abstract representation can be used to generate a similar informed heuristic, as described above. The CNN evaluation on multiple data sets indicates that the learned cost function generalizes well to realworld scenes and that the abstraction quality outperforms the manually tuned approach. Applied to hybrid driving-stepping locomotion planning, the heuristic achieves similar performance while design and tuning efforts are minimized. Since a learning-based method turned out to be beneficial to support the search-based planner, we finally investigate if the whole planning problem can be solved by a learning-based approach. Value Iteration Networks (VINs) are known to show good generalizability and goal-directed behavior, while being limited to small state spaces. Inspired by the above-described results, we extend VINs to incorporate multiple levels of abstraction to represent larger planning problems with suitable state space sizes. Experiments in 2D grid worlds show that this extension enables VINs to solve significantly larger planning tasks. We further apply the method to omnidirectional driving of the Centauro robot in cluttered environments which indicates limitations but also emphasizes the future potential of learning-based planning methods.Planung von Hybrider Fahr-Lauf-Lokomotion für Bodenroboter in Anspruchsvollen Umgebungen Bodenroboter, welche eine Vielzahl von Untergründen überwinden können, werden in vielen Anwendungsgebieten benötigt. Beispielszenarien sind die Katastrophenhilfe oder Erkundungsmissionen auf fremden Planeten. In diesem Kontext ist hybride Fahr-/Lauf-Fortbewegung vielversprechend, da sie die sich ergänzenden Stärken der beiden Fortbewegungsarten miteinander vereint. Um dies zu realisieren benötigen entsprechende Roboter allerdings komplexe kinematische Fähigkeiten, welche auch in adäquaten Ansätzen für die Planung dieser Fortbewegung berücksichtigt werden müssen. Anspruchsvolle Umgebungen mit komplexen Untergründen erhöhen dabei zusätzlich die Anforderungen an die Bewegungsplanung. In dieser Arbeit wird ein suchbasierter Ansatz für kombinierte Fahr-/Lauf-Fortbewegungsplanung vorgestellt. Die adressierten Zielplattformen sind vierbeinige Roboter, deren Beine in lenkbaren Rädern enden, so dass sie omnidirektional fahren und laufen können. Auf ausreichend ebenem Untergrund wird generell Fahren bevorzugt, während der Planer Laufmanöver in der Nähe von Hindernissen in Erwägung zieht. Schritte werden dabei in einer hierarchischen Art undWeise realisiert: Während des Planens werden nur Verbindungen zwischen geeigneten Auftrittsflächen gesucht. Nur solche Schritte, die im Ergebnispfad enthalten sind, werden anschließend zu detaillierten Bewegungsabläufen verfeinert, welche die Balance des Roboters sicherstellen. Um präzise Fortbewegung in anspruchsvollen Umgebungen zu ermöglichen, betrachtet der Planer die spezifischen Aufstandsflächen der vier Füße. Der Ansatz wurde sowohl in simulierten als auch in realen Tests mit den Robotern Momaro und Centauro evaluiert, wobei der Planer in der Lage war, Lösungspfade von ausreichender Qualität in zulässiger Zeit zu generieren. Allerdings ergeben die benötigte feine Planungsauflösung und die hochdimensionale Roboterrepräsentation große Zustandsräumen. Diese würden für komplexere oder größere Planungsprobleme die zulässige Rechenzeit und den verfügbaren Speicher überschreiten. Damit der Planer auch eben diese komplexeren oder größeren Planungsprobleme handhaben kann, wird eine Erweiterung des Ansatzes beschrieben, welche mehrere Repräsentationslevel mit einbezieht. In unmittelbarer Umgebung des Roboters wird die zuvor beschriebene detaillierte Repräsentation genutzt, um hochwertige Pfade für die nahe Zukunft zu erzeugen. Mit zunehmendem Abstand vom Roboter wird die Auflösung gröber und die Anzahl der Freiheitsgrade in der Roboterrepräsentation sinkt. Um den mit dieser Vergröberung einhergehenden Informationsverlust zu kompensieren, werden diese Repräsentationen mit zusätzlicher Semantik ausgestattet, welche das Szenenverständnis erhöht. Darüber hinaus wird beschrieben, wie die Repräsentation mit dem höchsten Abstraktionsgrad zur Berechnung einer effektiven Heuristik genutzt werden kann. Die Evaluation in Simulationsumgebungen zeigt, dass der Planungsprozess um mehrere Größenordnungen beschleunigt werden kann, während die Ergebnisqualität vergleichbar bleibt. Allerdings sind das manuelle Gestalten der zusätzlichen Repräsentationen und das dazugehörige Parametrisieren der Kostenfunktionen sehr arbeitsintensiv. Um diesen Aufwand zu reduzieren, wird daher eine Methode beschrieben, welche die Gestaltung einer abstrakten Repräsentation durch ein Convolutional Neural Network (CNN) unterstützt. Während eine grobe, niedrigdimensionale Roboterrepräsentation und ein dazugehöriges Aktionsset einfach definiert werden können, wird ein CNN auf künstlich erzeugten Daten trainiert, um die abstrakte Kostenfunktion zu lernen. Anschließend kann die so erzeugte abstrakte Repräsentation genutzt werden, um die bereits zuvor erwähnte effektive Heuristik zu berechnen. In der Evaluation des CNNs auf verschiedenen Datensätzen zeigt sich, dass die gelernte Kostenfunktion auch mit Daten aus realen Umgebungen funktioniert und dass die generelle Ergebnisqualität oberhalb der Ergebnisse mit manuell erzeugten Repräsentationen liegt. Die Anwendnung der Methode zur Planung hybrider Fahr-/Lauf-Fortbewegung zeigt, dass die so erzeugte Heuristik gleichwertige Ergebnisse wie die Heuristik auf Basis manuell erzeugter Repräsentation liefert, während der Aufwand zur Gestaltung und Parametrisierung deutlich verringert wurde. Da sich gezeigt hat, dass eine lernbasierte Methode den klassischen suchbasierten Ansatz effektiv unterstützen kann, wird in dieser Arbeit abschließend untersucht, ob das gesamte Planungsproblem durch eine lernbasierte Methode gelöst werden kann. Value Iteration Networks (VINs) sind in diesem Zusammenhang ein vielversprechender Ansatz, da sie bekanntlich ein gutes zielorientiertes Planungsverhalten lernen und das Gelernte auf unbekannte Situationen verallgemeinern können. Allerdings ist ihre bisherige Anwendung auf kleine Zustandsräume begrenzt. Durch die zuvor beschriebenen Ergebnisse motiviert, wird eine Erweiterung von VINs beschrieben, so dass diese auf verschiedenen Abstraktionsleveln planen, um größere Planungsprobleme in Zustandsräumen entsprechender Größe darzustellen. Experimente in 2D-Rasterumgebungen zeigen, dass die beschriebene Methode VINs in die Lage versetzt, deutlich größere Planungsprobleme zu lösen. Darüber hinaus wird die beschriebene Methode benutzt, um omnidirektionale Fahrmanöver für den Centauro-Roboter in anspruchsvollen Umgebungen zu planen. Gleichzeitig werden hier aber auch die momentanen, hardware-bedingten Grenzen rein lernbasierter Ansätze sowie ihr zukünftiges Potential aufgezeigt

    Combined Sampling and Optimization Based Planning for Legged-Wheeled Robots

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    Planning for legged-wheeled machines is typically done using trajectory optimization because of many degrees of freedom, thus rendering legged-wheeled planners prone to falling prey to bad local minima. We present a combined sampling and optimization-based planning approach that can cope with challenging terrain. The sampling-based stage computes whole-body configurations and contact schedule, which speeds up the optimization convergence. The optimization-based stage ensures that all the system constraints, such as non-holonomic rolling constraints, are satisfied. The evaluations show the importance of good initial guesses for optimization. Furthermore, they suggest that terrain/collision (avoidance) constraints are more challenging than the robot model's constraints. Lastly, we extend the optimization to handle general terrain representations in the form of elevation maps

    Variable Configuration Planner for Legged-Rolling Obstacle Negotiation Locomotion: Application on the CENTAURO Robot

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    Hybrid legged-wheeled robots are able to adapt their leg configuration and height to vary their footprint polygons and go over obstacles or traverse narrow spaces. In this paper, we present a variable configuration wheeled motion planner based on the A* algorithm. It takes advantage of the agility of hybrid wheeled-legged robots and plans paths over low-lying obstacles and in narrow spaces. By imposing a symmetry on the robot polygon, the computed plans lie in a low-dimensional search space that provides the robot with configurations to safely negotiate obstacles by expanding or shrinking its footprint polygon. The introduced autonomous planner is demonstrated using simulations and real-world experiments with the CENTAURO robot

    Reconfigurable and Agile Legged-Wheeled Robot Navigation in Cluttered Environments with Movable Obstacles

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    Legged and wheeled locomotion are two standard methods used by robots to perform navigation. Combining them to create a hybrid legged-wheeled locomotion results in increased speed, agility, and reconfigurability for the robot, allowing it to traverse a multitude of environments. The CENTAURO robot has these advantages, but they are accompanied by a higher-dimensional search space for formulating autonomous economical motion plans, especially in cluttered environments. In this article, we first review our previously presented legged-wheeled footprint reconfiguring global planner. We describe the two incremental prototypes, where the primary goal of the algorithms is to reduce the search space of possible footprints such that plans that expand the robot over the low-lying wide obstacles or narrow into passages can be computed with speed and efficiency. The planner also considers the cost of avoiding obstacles versus negotiating them by expanding over them. The second part of this article presents our new work on local obstacle pushing, which further increases the number of tight scenarios the planner can solve. The goal of the new local push-planner is to place any movable obstacle of unknown mass and inertial properties, obstructing the previously planned trajectory from our global planner, to a location devoid of obstruction. This is done while minimising the distance traveled by the robot, the distance the object is pushed, and its rotation caused by the push. Together, the local and global planners form a major part of the agile reconfigurable navigation suite for the legged-wheeled hybrid CENTAURO robot
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