361 research outputs found
Climbing and Walking Robots
Nowadays robotics is one of the most dynamic fields of scientific researches. The shift of robotics researches from manufacturing to services applications is clear. During the last decades interest in studying climbing and walking robots has been increased. This increasing interest has been in many areas that most important ones of them are: mechanics, electronics, medical engineering, cybernetics, controls, and computers. Today’s climbing and walking robots are a combination of manipulative, perceptive, communicative, and cognitive abilities and they are capable of performing many tasks in industrial and non- industrial environments. Surveillance, planetary exploration, emergence rescue operations, reconnaissance, petrochemical applications, construction, entertainment, personal services, intervention in severe environments, transportation, medical and etc are some applications from a very diverse application fields of climbing and walking robots. By great progress in this area of robotics it is anticipated that next generation climbing and walking robots will enhance lives and will change the way the human works, thinks and makes decisions. This book presents the state of the art achievments, recent developments, applications and future challenges of climbing and walking robots. These are presented in 24 chapters by authors throughtot the world The book serves as a reference especially for the researchers who are interested in mobile robots. It also is useful for industrial engineers and graduate students in advanced study
Beyond Basins of Attraction: Quantifying Robustness of Natural Dynamics
Properly designing a system to exhibit favorable natural dynamics can greatly
simplify designing or learning the control policy. However, it is still unclear
what constitutes favorable natural dynamics and how to quantify its effect.
Most studies of simple walking and running models have focused on the basins of
attraction of passive limit-cycles and the notion of self-stability. We instead
emphasize the importance of stepping beyond basins of attraction. We show an
approach based on viability theory to quantify robust sets in state-action
space. These sets are valid for the family of all robust control policies,
which allows us to quantify the robustness inherent to the natural dynamics
before designing the control policy or specifying a control objective. We
illustrate our formulation using spring-mass models, simple low dimensional
models of running systems. We then show an example application by optimizing
robustness of a simulated planar monoped, using a gradient-free optimization
scheme. Both case studies result in a nonlinear effective stiffness providing
more robustness.Comment: 15 pages. This work has been accepted to IEEE Transactions on
Robotics (2019
A Robot Operating System (ROS) based humanoid robot control
This thesis presents adapting techniques required to enhance the capability of a commercially available robot, namely, Robotis Bioloid Premium Humanoid Robot (BPHR). BeagleBone Black (BBB), the decision-making and implementing (intelligence providing) component, with multifunctional capabilities is used in this research. Robot operating System (ROS) and its libraries, as well as Python Script and its libraries have been developed and incorporated into the BBB. This fortified BBB intelligence providing component is then transplanted into the structure of the Robotis Bioloid humanoid robot, after removing the latter’s original decision-making and implementing component (controller). Thus, this study revitalizes the Bioloid humanoid robot by converting it into a humanoid robot with multiple features that can be inherited using ROS. This is a first of its kind approach wherein ROS is used as the development framework in conjunction with the main BBB controller and the software impregnated with Python libraries is used to integrate robotic functions. A full ROS computation is developed and a high level Application Programming Interface (API) usable by software utilizing ROS services is also developed. In this revised two-legged-humanoid robot, USB2Dynamixel connector is used to operate the Dynamixel AX-12A actuators through the Wi-Fi interface of the fortified BBB. An accelerometer sensor supports balancing of the robot, and updates data to the BBB periodically. An Infrared (IR) sensor is used to detect obstacles. This dynamic model is used to actuate the motors mounted on the robot leg thereby resulting in a swing-stance period of the legs for a stable forward movement of the robot. The maximum walking speed of the robot is 0.5 feet/second, beyond this limit the robot becomes unstable. The angle at which the robot leans is governed by the feedback from the accelerometer sensor, which is 20 degrees. If the robot tilts beyond a specific degree, then it would come back to its standstill position and stop further movement. When the robot moves forward, the IR sensors sense obstacles in front of the robot. If an obstacle is detected within 35 cm, then the robot stops moving further. Implementation of ROS on top of the BBB (by replacing CM530 controller with the BBB) and using feedback controls from the accelerometer and IR sensor to control the two-legged robotic movement are the novelties of this work
Locomoção de humanoides robusta e versátil baseada em controlo analĂtico e fĂsica residual
Humanoid robots are made to resemble humans but their locomotion
abilities are far from ours in terms of agility and versatility. When humans
walk on complex terrains or face external disturbances, they
combine a set of strategies, unconsciously and efficiently, to regain
stability. This thesis tackles the problem of developing a robust omnidirectional
walking framework, which is able to generate versatile
and agile locomotion on complex terrains. We designed and developed
model-based and model-free walk engines and formulated the
controllers using different approaches including classical and optimal
control schemes and validated their performance through simulations
and experiments. These frameworks have hierarchical structures that
are composed of several layers. These layers are composed of several
modules that are connected together to fade the complexity and
increase the flexibility of the proposed frameworks. Additionally, they
can be easily and quickly deployed on different platforms.
Besides, we believe that using machine learning on top of analytical approaches
is a key to open doors for humanoid robots to step out of laboratories.
We proposed a tight coupling between analytical control and
deep reinforcement learning. We augmented our analytical controller
with reinforcement learning modules to learn how to regulate the walk
engine parameters (planners and controllers) adaptively and generate
residuals to adjust the robot’s target joint positions (residual physics).
The effectiveness of the proposed frameworks was demonstrated and
evaluated across a set of challenging simulation scenarios. The robot
was able to generalize what it learned in one scenario, by displaying
human-like locomotion skills in unforeseen circumstances, even in the
presence of noise and external pushes.Os robĂ´s humanoides sĂŁo feitos para se parecerem com humanos,
mas suas habilidades de locomoção estão longe das nossas em termos
de agilidade e versatilidade. Quando os humanos caminham em
terrenos complexos ou enfrentam distĂşrbios externos combinam diferentes
estratégias, de forma inconsciente e eficiente, para recuperar a
estabilidade. Esta tese aborda o problema de desenvolver um sistema
robusto para andar de forma omnidirecional, capaz de gerar uma locomoção
para robôs humanoides versátil e ágil em terrenos complexos.
Projetámos e desenvolvemos motores de locomoção sem modelos e
baseados em modelos. Formulámos os controladores usando diferentes
abordagens, incluindo esquemas de controlo clássicos e ideais,
e validámos o seu desempenho por meio de simulações e experiências
reais. Estes frameworks têm estruturas hierárquicas compostas por
várias camadas. Essas camadas são compostas por vários módulos
que sĂŁo conectados entre si para diminuir a complexidade e aumentar
a flexibilidade dos frameworks propostos. Adicionalmente, o sistema
pode ser implementado em diferentes plataformas de forma fácil.
Acreditamos que o uso de aprendizagem automática sobre abordagens
analĂticas Ă© a chave para abrir as portas para robĂ´s humanoides
saĂrem dos laboratĂłrios. Propusemos um forte acoplamento entre controlo
analĂtico e aprendizagem profunda por reforço. Expandimos o
nosso controlador analĂtico com mĂłdulos de aprendizagem por reforço
para aprender como regular os parâmetros do motor de caminhada
(planeadores e controladores) de forma adaptativa e gerar resĂduos
para ajustar as posições das juntas alvo do robĂ´ (fĂsica residual). A
eficácia das estruturas propostas foi demonstrada e avaliada em um
conjunto de cenários de simulação desafiadores. O robô foi capaz de
generalizar o que aprendeu em um cenário, exibindo habilidades de
locomoção humanas em circunstâncias imprevistas, mesmo na presença
de ruĂdo e impulsos externos.Programa Doutoral em Informátic
Deep Reinforcement Learning for Tensegrity Robot Locomotion
Tensegrity robots, composed of rigid rods connected by elastic cables, have a
number of unique properties that make them appealing for use as planetary
exploration rovers. However, control of tensegrity robots remains a difficult
problem due to their unusual structures and complex dynamics. In this work, we
show how locomotion gaits can be learned automatically using a novel extension
of mirror descent guided policy search (MDGPS) applied to periodic locomotion
movements, and we demonstrate the effectiveness of our approach on tensegrity
robot locomotion. We evaluate our method with real-world and simulated
experiments on the SUPERball tensegrity robot, showing that the learned
policies generalize to changes in system parameters, unreliable sensor
measurements, and variation in environmental conditions, including varied
terrains and a range of different gravities. Our experiments demonstrate that
our method not only learns fast, power-efficient feedback policies for rolling
gaits, but that these policies can succeed with only the limited onboard
sensing provided by SUPERball's accelerometers. We compare the learned feedback
policies to learned open-loop policies and hand-engineered controllers, and
demonstrate that the learned policy enables the first continuous, reliable
locomotion gait for the real SUPERball robot. Our code and other supplementary
materials are available from http://rll.berkeley.edu/drl_tensegrityComment: International Conference on Robotics and Automation (ICRA), 2017.
Project website link is http://rll.berkeley.edu/drl_tensegrit
A Modular Framework to Generate Robust Biped Locomotion: From Planning to Control
Biped robots are inherently unstable because of their complex kinematics as
well as dynamics. Despite the many research efforts in developing biped
locomotion, the performance of biped locomotion is still far from the
expectations. This paper proposes a model-based framework to generate stable
biped locomotion. The core of this framework is an abstract dynamics model
which is composed of three masses to consider the dynamics of stance leg, torso
and swing leg for minimizing the tracking problems. According to this dynamics
model, we propose a modular walking reference trajectories planner which takes
into account obstacles to plan all the references. Moreover, this dynamics
model is used to formulate the controller as a Model Predictive Control (MPC)
scheme which can consider some constraints in the states of the system, inputs,
outputs and also mixed input-output. The performance and the robustness of the
proposed framework are validated by performing several numerical simulations
using MATLAB. Moreover, the framework is deployed on a simulated
torque-controlled humanoid to verify its performance and robustness. The
simulation results show that the proposed framework is capable of generating
biped locomotion robustly
- …