937 research outputs found
Grasp Motion Planning for box opening task by multi-fingered hands and arms
The aim of our project is to develop a robot to manipulate an object in human environment. In this paper, as a first step, we focus on opening paper box such as tea box, and present a method to plan grasp motion by 2 arms with multi-fingered hands. we propose a task priority based scheme to plan grasping area consistent with whole steps of the given task procedure. Based on the grasping area and the concept of preshape, we derive desired fingertip positions and hand base position and orientation for preshape. Based on the vector field approach, we propose a motion planning method for the planned grasp by multi-fingered hands to avoid any undesired collisions. This method can be applied to regrasping and a motion in which collision is required
Dexterous Manipulation Graphs
We propose the Dexterous Manipulation Graph as a tool to address in-hand
manipulation and reposition an object inside a robot's end-effector. This graph
is used to plan a sequence of manipulation primitives so to bring the object to
the desired end pose. This sequence of primitives is translated into motions of
the robot to move the object held by the end-effector. We use a dual arm robot
with parallel grippers to test our method on a real system and show successful
planning and execution of in-hand manipulation
Analysis and Observations from the First Amazon Picking Challenge
This paper presents a overview of the inaugural Amazon Picking Challenge
along with a summary of a survey conducted among the 26 participating teams.
The challenge goal was to design an autonomous robot to pick items from a
warehouse shelf. This task is currently performed by human workers, and there
is hope that robots can someday help increase efficiency and throughput while
lowering cost. We report on a 28-question survey posed to the teams to learn
about each team's background, mechanism design, perception apparatus, planning
and control approach. We identify trends in this data, correlate it with each
team's success in the competition, and discuss observations and lessons learned
based on survey results and the authors' personal experiences during the
challenge
Bio-Inspired Motion Strategies for a Bimanual Manipulation Task
Steffen JF, Elbrechter C, Haschke R, Ritter H. Bio-Inspired Motion Strategies for a Bimanual Manipulation Task. In: International Conference on Humanoid Robots (Humanoids). 2010
Folding Assembly by Means of Dual-Arm Robotic Manipulation
In this paper, we consider folding assembly as an assembly primitive suitable
for dual-arm robotic assembly, that can be integrated in a higher level
assembly strategy. The system composed by two pieces in contact is modelled as
an articulated object, connected by a prismatic-revolute joint. Different
grasping scenarios were considered in order to model the system, and a simple
controller based on feedback linearisation is proposed, using force torque
measurements to compute the contact point kinematics. The folding assembly
controller has been experimentally tested with two sample parts, in order to
showcase folding assembly as a viable assembly primitive.Comment: 7 pages, accepted for ICRA 201
Sense, Think, Grasp: A study on visual and tactile information processing for autonomous manipulation
Interacting with the environment using hands is one of the distinctive
abilities of humans with respect to other species. This aptitude reflects on
the crucial role played by objects\u2019 manipulation in the world that we have
shaped for us. With a view of bringing robots outside industries for supporting
people during everyday life, the ability of manipulating objects
autonomously and in unstructured environments is therefore one of the basic
skills they need. Autonomous manipulation is characterized by great
complexity especially regarding the processing of sensors information to
perceive the surrounding environment. Humans rely on vision for wideranging
tridimensional information, prioprioception for the awareness of
the relative position of their own body in the space and the sense of touch
for local information when physical interaction with objects happens. The
study of autonomous manipulation in robotics aims at transferring similar
perceptive skills to robots so that, combined with state of the art control
techniques, they could be able to achieve similar performance in manipulating
objects. The great complexity of this task makes autonomous
manipulation one of the open problems in robotics that has been drawing
increasingly the research attention in the latest years.
In this work of Thesis, we propose possible solutions to some key components
of autonomous manipulation, focusing in particular on the perception
problem and testing the developed approaches on the humanoid robotic platform iCub. When available, vision is the first source of information
to be processed for inferring how to interact with objects. The object
modeling and grasping pipeline based on superquadric functions we designed
meets this need, since it reconstructs the object 3D model from partial
point cloud and computes a suitable hand pose for grasping the object.
Retrieving objects information with touch sensors only is a relevant skill
that becomes crucial when vision is occluded, as happens for instance during
physical interaction with the object. We addressed this problem with
the design of a novel tactile localization algorithm, named Memory Unscented
Particle Filter, capable of localizing and recognizing objects relying solely
on 3D contact points collected on the object surface. Another key point of
autonomous manipulation we report on in this Thesis work is bi-manual
coordination. The execution of more advanced manipulation tasks in fact
might require the use and coordination of two arms. Tool usage for instance
often requires a proper in-hand object pose that can be obtained via
dual-arm re-grasping. In pick-and-place tasks sometimes the initial and
target position of the object do not belong to the same arm workspace, then
requiring to use one hand for lifting the object and the other for locating it
in the new position. At this regard, we implemented a pipeline for executing
the handover task, i.e. the sequences of actions for autonomously passing an
object from one robot hand on to the other.
The contributions described thus far address specific subproblems of
the more complex task of autonomous manipulation. This actually differs
from what humans do, in that humans develop their manipulation
skills by learning through experience and trial-and-error strategy. Aproper
mathematical formulation for encoding this learning approach is given by
Deep Reinforcement Learning, that has recently proved to be successful in
many robotics applications. For this reason, in this Thesis we report also
on the six month experience carried out at Berkeley Artificial Intelligence
Research laboratory with the goal of studying Deep Reinforcement Learning
and its application to autonomous manipulation
Manipulation primitives: A paradigm for abstraction and execution of grasping and manipulation tasks
Sensor-based reactive and hybrid approaches have proven a promising line of study to address imperfect knowledge in grasping and manipulation. However the reactive approaches are usually tightly coupled to a particular embodiment making transfer of knowledge difficult.
This paper proposes a paradigm for modeling and execution of reactive manipulation actions, which makes knowledge transfer to different embodiments possible while retaining the reactive capabilities of the embodiments. The proposed approach extends the idea of control primitives coordinated by a state machine by introducing an embodiment independent layer of abstraction. Abstract manipulation primitives constitute a vocabulary of atomic, embodiment independent actions, which can be coordinated using state machines to describe complex actions. To obtain embodiment specific models, the abstract state machines are automatically translated to embodiment specific models, such that full capabilities of each platform can be utilized.
The strength of the manipulation primitives paradigm is demonstrated by developing a set of corresponding embodiment specific primitives for object transport, including a complex reactive grasping primitive. The robustness of the approach is experimentally studied in emptying of a box filled with several unknown objects. The embodiment independence is studied by performing a manipulation task on two different platforms using the same abstract description
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