34 research outputs found

    Centaur: A Mobile Dexterous Humanoid for Surface Operations

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    Future human and robotic planetary expeditions could benefit greatly from expanded Extra-Vehicular Activity (EVA) capabilities supporting a broad range of multiple, concurrent surface operations. Risky, expensive and complex, conventional EVAs are restricted in both duration and scope by consumables and available manpower, creating a resource management problem. A mobile, highly dexterous Extra-Vehicular Robotic (EVR) system called Centaur is proposed to cost-effectively augment human astronauts on surface excursions. The Centaur design combines a highly capable wheeled mobility platform with an anthropomorphic upper body mounted on a three degree-of-freedom waist. Able to use many ordinary handheld tools, the robot could conserve EVA hours by relieving humans of many routine inspection and maintenance chores and assisting them in more complex tasks, such as repairing other robots. As an astronaut surrogate, Centaur could take risks unacceptable to humans, respond more quickly to EVA emergencies and work much longer shifts. Though originally conceived as a system for planetary surface exploration, the Centaur concept could easily be adapted for terrestrial military applications such as de-Gig, surveillance and other hazardous duties

    NASA space station automation: AI-based technology review

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    Research and Development projects in automation for the Space Station are discussed. Artificial Intelligence (AI) based automation technologies are planned to enhance crew safety through reduced need for EVA, increase crew productivity through the reduction of routine operations, increase space station autonomy, and augment space station capability through the use of teleoperation and robotics. AI technology will also be developed for the servicing of satellites at the Space Station, system monitoring and diagnosis, space manufacturing, and the assembly of large space structures

    Robotics handbook. Version 1: For the interested party and professional

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    This publication covers several categories of information about robotics. The first section provides a brief overview of the field of Robotics. The next section provides a reasonably detailed look at the NASA Robotics program. The third section features a listing of companies and organization engaging in robotics or robotic-related activities; followed by a listing of associations involved in the field; followed by a listing of publications and periodicals which cover elements of robotics or related fields. The final section is an abbreviated abstract of referred journal material and other reference material relevant to the technology and science of robotics, including such allied fields as vision perception; three-space axis orientation and measurement systems and associated inertial reference technology and algorithms; and physical and mechanical science and technology related to robotics

    Human-robot interaction for telemanipulation by small unmanned aerial systems

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    This dissertation investigated the human-robot interaction (HRI) for the Mission Specialist role in a telemanipulating unmanned aerial system (UAS). The emergence of commercial unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) platforms transformed the civil and environmental engineering industries through applications such as surveying, remote infrastructure inspection, and construction monitoring, which normally use UAVs for visual inspection only. Recent developments, however, suggest that performing physical interactions in dynamic environments will be important tasks for future UAS, particularly in applications such as environmental sampling and infrastructure testing. In all domains, the availability of a Mission Specialist to monitor the interaction and intervene when necessary is essential for successful deployments. Additionally, manual operation is the default mode for safety reasons; therefore, understanding Mission Specialist HRI is important for all small telemanipulating UAS in civil engineering, regardless of system autonomy and application. A 5 subject exploratory study and a 36 subject experimental study were conducted to evaluate variations of a dedicated, mobile Mission Specialist interface for aerial telemanipulation from a small UAV. The Shared Roles Model was used to model the UAS human-robot team, and the Mission Specialist and Pilot roles were informed by the current state of practice for manipulating UAVs. Three interface camera view designs were tested using a within-subjects design, which included an egocentric view (perspective from the manipulator), exocentric view (perspective from the UAV), and mixed egocentric-exocentric view. The experimental trials required Mission Specialist participants to complete a series of tasks with physical, visual, and verbal requirements. Results from these studies found that subjects who preferred the exocentric condition performed tasks 50% faster when using their preferred interface; however, interface preferences did not affect performance for participants who preferred the mixed condition. This result led to a second finding that participants who preferred the exocentric condition were distracted by the egocentric view during the mixed condition, likely caused by cognitive tunneling, and the data suggest tradeoffs between performance improvements and attentional costs when adding information in the form of multiple views to the Mission Specialist interface. Additionally, based on this empirical evaluation of multiple camera views, the exocentric view was recommended for use in a dedicated Mission Specialist telemanipulation interface. Contributions of this thesis include: i) conducting the first focused HRI study of aerial telemanipulation, ii) development of an evaluative model for telemanipulation performance, iii) creation of new recommendations for aerial telemanipulation interfacing, and iv) contribution of code, hardware designs, and system architectures to the open-source UAV community. The evaluative model provides a detailed framework, a complement to the abstraction of the Shared Roles Model, that can be used to measure the effects of changes in the system, environment, operators, and interfacing factors on performance. The practical contributions of this work will expedite the use of manipulating UAV technologies by scientists, researchers, and stakeholders, particularly those in civil engineering, who will directly benefit from improved manipulating UAV performance

    An optimization-based formalism for shared autonomy in dynamic environments

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    Teleoperation is an integral component of various industrial processes. For example, concrete spraying, assisted welding, plastering, inspection, and maintenance. Often these systems implement direct control that maps interface signals onto robot motions. Successful completion of tasks typically requires high levels of manual dexterity and cognitive load. In addition, the operator is often present nearby dangerous machinery. Consequently, safety is of critical importance and training is expensive and prolonged -- in some cases taking several months or even years. An autonomous robot replacement would be an ideal solution since the human could be removed from danger and training costs significantly reduced. However, this is currently not possible due to the complexity and unpredictability of the environments, and the levels of situational and contextual awareness required to successfully complete these tasks. In this thesis, the limitations of direct control are addressed by developing methods for shared autonomy. A shared autonomous approach combines human input with autonomy to generate optimal robot motions. The approach taken in this thesis is to formulate shared autonomy within an optimization framework that finds optimized states and controls by minimizing a cost function, modeling task objectives, given a set of (changing) physical and operational constraints. Online shared autonomy requires the human to be continuously interacting with the system via an interface (akin to direct control). The key challenges addressed in this thesis are: 1) ensuring computational feasibility (such a method should be able to find solutions fast enough to achieve a sampling frequency bound below by 40Hz), 2) being reactive to changes in the environment and operator intention, 3) knowing how to appropriately blend operator input and autonomy, and 4) allowing the operator to supply input in an intuitive manner that is conducive to high task performance. Various operator interfaces are investigated with regards to the control space, called a mode of teleoperation. Extensive evaluations were carried out to determine for which modes are most intuitive and lead to highest performance in target acquisition tasks (e.g. spraying/welding/etc). Our performance metrics quantified task difficulty based on Fitts' law, as well as a measure of how well constraints affecting the task performance were met. The experimental evaluations indicate that higher performance is achieved when humans submit commands in low-dimensional task spaces as opposed to joint space manipulations. In addition, our multivariate analysis indicated that those with regular exposure to computer games achieved higher performance. Shared autonomy aims to relieve human operators of the burden of precise motor control, tracking, and localization. An optimization-based representation for shared autonomy in dynamic environments was developed. Real-time tractability is ensured by modulating the human input with information of the changing environment within the same task space, instead of adding it to the optimization cost or constraints. The method was illustrated with two real world applications: grasping objects in cluttered environments and spraying tasks requiring sprayed linings with greater homogeneity. Maintaining motion patterns -- referred to as skills -- is often an integral part of teleoperation for various industrial processes (e.g. spraying, welding, plastering). We develop a novel model-based shared autonomous framework for incorporating the notion of skill assistance to aid operators to sustain these motion patterns whilst adhering to environment constraints. In order to achieve computational feasibility, we introduce a novel parameterization for state and control that combines skill and underlying trajectory models, leveraging a special type of curve known as Clothoids. This new parameterization allows for efficient computation of skill-based short term horizon plans, enabling the use of a model predictive control loop. Our hardware realization validates the effectiveness of our method to recognize a change of intended skill, and showing an improved quality of output motion, even under dynamically changing obstacles. In addition, extensions of the work to supervisory control are described. An exploratory study presents an approach that improves computational feasibility for complex tasks with minimal interactive effort on the part of the human. Adaptations are theorized which might allow such a method to be applicable and beneficial to high degree of freedom systems. Finally, a system developed in our lab is described that implements sliding autonomy and shown to complete multi-objective tasks in complex environments with minimal interaction from the human

    Extending the motion planning framework鈥擬oveIt with advanced manipulation functions for industrial applications

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    MoveIt is the primary software library for motion planning and mobile manipulation in ROS, and it incorporates the latest advances in motion planning, control and perception. However, it is still quite recent, and some important functions to build more advanced manipulation applications, required to robotize many manufacturing processes, have not been developed yet. MoveIt is an open source software, and it relies on the contributions from its community to keep improving and adding new features. Therefore, in this paper, its current state is analyzed to find out which are its main necessities and provide a solution to them. In particular, three gaps of MoveIt are addressed: the automatic tool changing at runtime, the generation of trajectories with full control over the end effector path and speed, and the generation of dual-arm trajectories using different synchronization policies. These functions have been tested with a Motoman SDA10F dual-arm robot, demonstrating their validity in different scenarios. All the developed solutions are generic and robot-agnostic, and they are openly available to be used to extend the capabilities of MoveIt.publishedVersionPeer reviewe

    Proceedings of the NASA Conference on Space Telerobotics, volume 2

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    These proceedings contain papers presented at the NASA Conference on Space Telerobotics held in Pasadena, January 31 to February 2, 1989. 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

    Large space structures and systems in the space station era: A bibliography with indexes (supplement 05)

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    Bibliographies and abstracts are listed for 1363 reports, articles, and other documents introduced into the NASA scientific and technical information system between January 1, 1991 and July 31, 1992. Topics covered include technology development and mission design according to system, interactive analysis and design, structural and thermal analysis and design, structural concepts and control systems, electronics, advanced materials, assembly concepts, propulsion and solar power satellite systems

    Second Annual Workshop on Space Operations Automation and Robotics (SOAR 1988)

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    Papers presented at the Second Annual Workshop on Space Operation Automation and Robotics (SOAR '88), hosted by Wright State University at Dayton, Ohio, on July 20, 21, 22, and 23, 1988, are documented herein. During the 4 days, approximately 100 technical papers were presented by experts from NASA, the USAF, universities, and technical companies. Panel discussions on Human Factors, Artificial Intelligence, Robotics, and Space Systems were held but are not documented herein. Technical topics addressed included knowledge-based systems, human factors, and robotics
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