2,535 research outputs found

    A Factor Graph Approach to Multi-Camera Extrinsic Calibration on Legged Robots

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    Legged robots are becoming popular not only in research, but also in industry, where they can demonstrate their superiority over wheeled machines in a variety of applications. Either when acting as mobile manipulators or just as all-terrain ground vehicles, these machines need to precisely track the desired base and end-effector trajectories, perform Simultaneous Localization and Mapping (SLAM), and move in challenging environments, all while keeping balance. A crucial aspect for these tasks is that all onboard sensors must be properly calibrated and synchronized to provide consistent signals for all the software modules they feed. In this paper, we focus on the problem of calibrating the relative pose between a set of cameras and the base link of a quadruped robot. This pose is fundamental to successfully perform sensor fusion, state estimation, mapping, and any other task requiring visual feedback. To solve this problem, we propose an approach based on factor graphs that jointly optimizes the mutual position of the cameras and the robot base using kinematics and fiducial markers. We also quantitatively compare its performance with other state-of-the-art methods on the hydraulic quadruped robot HyQ. The proposed approach is simple, modular, and independent from external devices other than the fiducial marker.Comment: To appear on "The Third IEEE International Conference on Robotic Computing (IEEE IRC 2019)

    A Comparative Review of Hand-Eye Calibration Techniques for Vision Guided Robots

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    Hand-eye calibration enables proper perception of the environment in which a vision guided robot operates. Additionally, it enables the mapping of the scene in the robots frame. Proper hand-eye calibration is crucial when sub-millimetre perceptual accuracy is needed. For example, in robot assisted surgery, a poorly calibrated robot would cause damage to surrounding vital tissues and organs, endangering the life of a patient. A lot of research has gone into ways of accurately calibrating the hand-eye system of a robot with different levels of success, challenges, resource requirements and complexities. As such, academics and industrial practitioners are faced with the challenge of choosing which algorithm meets the implementation requirements based on the identified constraints. This review aims to give a general overview of the strengths and weaknesses of different hand-eye calibration algorithms available to academics and industrial practitioners to make an informed design decision, as well as incite possible areas of research based on the identified challenges. We also discuss different calibration targets which is an important part of the calibration process that is often overlooked in the design process

    High-precision grasping and placing for mobile robots

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    This work presents a manipulation system for multiple labware in life science laboratories using the H20 mobile robots. The H20 robot is equipped with the Kinect V2 sensor to identify and estimate the position of the required labware on the workbench. The local features recognition based on SURF algorithm is used. The recognition process is performed for the labware to be grasped and for the workbench holder. Different grippers and labware containers are designed to manipulate different weights of labware and to realize a safe transportation

    Caveats on the first-generation da Vinci Research Kit: latent technical constraints and essential calibrations

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    Telesurgical robotic systems provide a well established form of assistance in the operating theater, with evidence of growing uptake in recent years. Until now, the da Vinci surgical system (Intuitive Surgical Inc, Sunnyvale, California) has been the most widely adopted robot of this kind, with more than 6,700 systems in current clinical use worldwide [1]. To accelerate research on robotic-assisted surgery, the retired first-generation da Vinci robots have been redeployed for research use as "da Vinci Research Kits" (dVRKs), which have been distributed to research institutions around the world to support both training and research in the sector. In the past ten years, a great amount of research on the dVRK has been carried out across a vast range of research topics. During this extensive and distributed process, common technical issues have been identified that are buried deep within the dVRK research and development architecture, and were found to be common among dVRK user feedback, regardless of the breadth and disparity of research directions identified. This paper gathers and analyzes the most significant of these, with a focus on the technical constraints of the first-generation dVRK, which both existing and prospective users should be aware of before embarking onto dVRK-related research. The hope is that this review will aid users in identifying and addressing common limitations of the systems promptly, thus helping to accelerate progress in the field.Comment: 15 pages, 7 figure

    Occlusion-Aware Multi-View Reconstruction of Articulated Objects for Manipulation

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    The goal of this research is to develop algorithms using multiple views to automatically recover complete 3D models of articulated objects in unstructured environments and thereby enable a robotic system to facilitate further manipulation of those objects. First, an algorithm called Procrustes-Lo-RANSAC (PLR) is presented. Structure-from-motion techniques are used to capture 3D point cloud models of an articulated object in two different configurations. Procrustes analysis, combined with a locally optimized RANSAC sampling strategy, facilitates a straightforward geometric approach to recovering the joint axes, as well as classifying them automatically as either revolute or prismatic. The algorithm does not require prior knowledge of the object, nor does it make any assumptions about the planarity of the object or scene. Second, with such a resulting articulated model, a robotic system is then able to manipulate the object either along its joint axes at a specified grasp point in order to exercise its degrees of freedom or move its end effector to a particular position even if the point is not visible in the current view. This is one of the main advantages of the occlusion-aware approach, because the models capture all sides of the object meaning that the robot has knowledge of parts of the object that are not visible in the current view. Experiments with a PUMA 500 robotic arm demonstrate the effectiveness of the approach on a variety of real-world objects containing both revolute and prismatic joints. Third, we improve the proposed approach by using a RGBD sensor (Microsoft Kinect) that yield a depth value for each pixel immediately by the sensor itself rather than requiring correspondence to establish depth. KinectFusion algorithm is applied to produce a single high-quality, geometrically accurate 3D model from which rigid links of the object are segmented and aligned, allowing the joint axes to be estimated using the geometric approach. The improved algorithm does not require artificial markers attached to objects, yields much denser 3D models and reduces the computation time

    Mobile Manipulation: A Case Study

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