1,864 research outputs found
Microfluidics and Bio-MEMS for Next Generation Healthcare.
Ph.D. Thesis. University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa 2018
Towards Autonomous Selective Harvesting: A Review of Robot Perception, Robot Design, Motion Planning and Control
This paper provides an overview of the current state-of-the-art in selective
harvesting robots (SHRs) and their potential for addressing the challenges of
global food production. SHRs have the potential to increase productivity,
reduce labour costs, and minimise food waste by selectively harvesting only
ripe fruits and vegetables. The paper discusses the main components of SHRs,
including perception, grasping, cutting, motion planning, and control. It also
highlights the challenges in developing SHR technologies, particularly in the
areas of robot design, motion planning and control. The paper also discusses
the potential benefits of integrating AI and soft robots and data-driven
methods to enhance the performance and robustness of SHR systems. Finally, the
paper identifies several open research questions in the field and highlights
the need for further research and development efforts to advance SHR
technologies to meet the challenges of global food production. Overall, this
paper provides a starting point for researchers and practitioners interested in
developing SHRs and highlights the need for more research in this field.Comment: Preprint: to be appeared in Journal of Field Robotic
Advanced Mobile Robotics: Volume 3
Mobile robotics is a challenging field with great potential. It covers disciplines including electrical engineering, mechanical engineering, computer science, cognitive science, and social science. It is essential to the design of automated robots, in combination with artificial intelligence, vision, and sensor technologies. Mobile robots are widely used for surveillance, guidance, transportation and entertainment tasks, as well as medical applications. This Special Issue intends to concentrate on recent developments concerning mobile robots and the research surrounding them to enhance studies on the fundamental problems observed in the robots. Various multidisciplinary approaches and integrative contributions including navigation, learning and adaptation, networked system, biologically inspired robots and cognitive methods are welcome contributions to this Special Issue, both from a research and an application perspective
Vision-Based Autonomous Control in Robotic Surgery
Robotic Surgery has completely changed surgical procedures. Enhanced dexterity, ergonomics, motion scaling, and tremor filtering, are well-known advantages introduced with respect to classical laparoscopy. In the past decade, robotic plays a fundamental role in Minimally Invasive Surgery (MIS) in which the da Vinci robotic system (Intuitive Surgical Inc., Sunnyvale, CA) is the most widely used system for robot-assisted laparoscopic procedures. Robots also have great potentiality in Microsurgical applications, where human limits are crucial and surgical sub-millimetric gestures could have enormous benefits with motion scaling and tremor compensation. However, surgical robots still lack advanced assistive control methods that could notably support surgeon's activity and perform surgical tasks in autonomy for a high quality of intervention.
In this scenario, images are the main feedback the surgeon can use to correctly operate in the surgical site. Therefore, in view of the increasing autonomy in surgical robotics, vision-based techniques play an important role and can arise by extending computer vision algorithms to surgical scenarios. Moreover, many surgical tasks could benefit from the application of advanced control techniques, allowing the surgeon to work under less stressful conditions and performing the surgical procedures with more accuracy and safety. The thesis starts from these topics, providing surgical robots the ability to perform complex tasks helping the surgeon to skillfully manipulate the robotic system to accomplish the above requirements. An increase in safety and a reduction in mental workload is achieved through the introduction of active constraints, that can prevent the surgical tool from crossing a forbidden region and similarly generate constrained motion to guide the surgeon on a specific path, or to accomplish robotic autonomous tasks. This leads to the development of a vision-based method for robot-aided dissection procedure allowing the control algorithm to autonomously adapt to environmental changes during the surgical intervention using stereo images elaboration. Computer vision is exploited to define a surgical tools collision avoidance method that uses Forbidden Region Virtual Fixtures by rendering a repulsive force to the surgeon. Advanced control techniques based on an optimization approach are developed, allowing multiple tasks execution with task definition encoded through Control Barrier Functions (CBFs) and enhancing haptic-guided teleoperation system during suturing procedures. The proposed methods are tested on a different robotic platform involving da Vinci Research Kit robot (dVRK) and a new microsurgical robotic platform. Finally, the integration of new sensors and instruments in surgical robots are considered, including a multi-functional tool for dexterous tissues manipulation and different visual sensing technologies
Intelligent strategies for mobile robotics in laboratory automation
In this thesis a new intelligent framework is presented for the mobile robots in laboratory automation, which includes: a new multi-floor indoor navigation method is presented and an intelligent multi-floor path planning is proposed; a new signal filtering method is presented for the robots to forecast their indoor coordinates; a new human feature based strategy is proposed for the robot-human smart collision avoidance; a new robot power forecasting method is proposed to decide a distributed transportation task; a new blind approach is presented for the arm manipulations for the robots
Proceedings of the NASA Conference on Space Telerobotics, volume 3
The theme of the Conference was man-machine collaboration in space. The Conference provided a forum for researchers and engineers to exchange ideas on the research and development required for application of telerobotics technology to the space systems planned for the 1990s and beyond. The Conference: (1) provided a view of current NASA telerobotic research and development; (2) stimulated technical exchange on man-machine systems, manipulator control, machine sensing, machine intelligence, concurrent computation, and system architectures; and (3) identified important unsolved problems of current interest which can be dealt with by future research
System Architectures for Cooperative Teams of Unmanned Aerial Vehicles Interacting Physically with the Environment
Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs) have become quite a useful tool for a wide range of
applications, from inspection & maintenance to search & rescue, among others. The
capabilities of a single UAV can be extended or complemented by the deployment
of more UAVs, so multi-UAV cooperative teams are becoming a trend. In that case,
as di erent autopilots, heterogeneous platforms, and application-dependent software
components have to be integrated, multi-UAV system architectures that are fexible
and can adapt to the team's needs are required.
In this thesis, we develop system architectures for cooperative teams of UAVs,
paying special attention to applications that require physical interaction with the
environment, which is typically unstructured. First, we implement some layers to
abstract the high-level components from the hardware speci cs. Then we propose
increasingly advanced architectures, from a single-UAV hierarchical navigation architecture
to an architecture for a cooperative team of heterogeneous UAVs. All
this work has been thoroughly tested in both simulation and eld experiments in
di erent challenging scenarios through research projects and robotics competitions.
Most of the applications required physical interaction with the environment, mainly
in unstructured outdoors scenarios. All the know-how and lessons learned throughout
the process are shared in this thesis, and all relevant code is publicly available.Los vehículos aéreos no tripulados (UAVs, del inglés Unmanned Aerial Vehicles) se han
convertido en herramientas muy valiosas para un amplio espectro de aplicaciones, como
inspección y mantenimiento, u operaciones de rescate, entre otras. Las capacidades de un
único UAV pueden verse extendidas o complementadas al utilizar varios de estos vehículos
simultáneamente, por lo que la tendencia actual es el uso de equipos cooperativos con
múltiples UAVs. Para ello, es fundamental la integración de diferentes autopilotos,
plataformas heterogéneas, y componentes software -que dependen de la aplicación-, por lo
que se requieren arquitecturas multi-UAV que sean flexibles y adaptables a las necesidades
del equipo.
En esta tesis, se desarrollan arquitecturas para equipos cooperativos de UAVs, prestando
una especial atención a aplicaciones que requieran de interacción física con el entorno,
cuya naturaleza es típicamente no estructurada. Primero se proponen capas para abstraer a
los componentes de alto nivel de las particularidades del hardware. Luego se desarrollan
arquitecturas cada vez más avanzadas, desde una arquitectura de navegación para un
único UAV, hasta una para un equipo cooperativo de UAVs heterogéneos. Todo el trabajo ha
sido minuciosamente probado, tanto en simulación como en experimentos reales, en
diferentes y complejos escenarios motivados por proyectos de investigación y
competiciones de robótica. En la mayoría de las aplicaciones se requería de interacción
física con el entorno, que es normalmente un escenario en exteriores no estructurado. A lo
largo de la tesis, se comparten todo el conocimiento adquirido y las lecciones aprendidas en
el proceso, y el código relevante está publicado como open-source
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