50 research outputs found

    Kinematic optimization for the design of a collaborative robot end-effector for tele-echography

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    Tele-examination based on robotic technologies is a promising solution to solve the current worsening shortage of physicians. Echocardiography is among the examinations that would benefit more from robotic solutions. However, most of the state-of-the-art solutions are based on the development of specific robotic arms, instead of exploiting COTS (commercial-off-the-shelf) arms to reduce costs and make such systems affordable. In this paper, we address this problem by studying the design of an end-effector for tele-echography to be mounted on two popular and low-cost collaborative robots, i.e., the Universal Robot UR5, and the Franka Emika Panda. In the case of the UR5 robot, we investigate the possibility of adding a seventh rotational degree of freedom. The design is obtained by kinematic optimization, in which a manipulability measure is an objective function. The optimization domain includes the position of the patient with regards to the robot base and the pose of the end-effector frame. Constraints include the full coverage of the examination area, the possibility to orient the probe correctly, have the base of the robot far enough from the patient’s head, and a suitable distance from singularities. The results show that adding a degree of freedom improves manipulability by 65% and that adding a custom-designed actuated joint is better than adopting a native seven-degrees-freedom robot

    Smooth Coverage Path Planning for UAVs with Model Predictive Control Trajectory Tracking

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    Within the Industry 4.0 ecosystem, Inspection Robotics is one fundamental technology to speed up monitoring processes and obtain good accuracy and performance of the inspections while avoiding possible safety issues for human personnel. This manuscript investigates the robotics inspection of areas and surfaces employing Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs). The contribution starts by addressing the problem of coverage path planning and proposes a smoothing approach intended to reduce both flight time and memory consumption to store the target navigation path. Evaluation tests are conducted on a quadrotor equipped with a Model Predictive Control (MPC) policy and a Simultaneous Localization and Mapping (SLAM) algorithm to localize the UAV in the environment

    Accurate Identification of 3D Pose through Reprojection onto a Single Image from Mask-RCNN Contour

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    This work addresses an automated system that supports the "Maintenance on Condition"paradigm. The system automatically processes auto-recorded video streams collected by a wayside camera capture device, and proceeds to a preliminary analysis in search for posture errors.We present and discuss a novel system that provides a proper identification of pantograph heads from video sources or image sequences and proceeds to recover the 3D asset from a single 2D image. The system exploits modern Deep Learning (DL) networks to extract a preliminary pantograph shape from the video sequence, then applies an optimization algorithm to estimate accurate position and orientation.A comparative and exhaustive analysis with few hundreds of samples shows the accuracy of the algorithm and the robustness to changes in illumination and other environmental conditions

    Assessing the utility of dual finger haptic interaction with 3D virtual environments for blind people

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    Hungary, 2002 ï›™2002 ICDVRAT/University of Reading, UK; ISBN 07 049 11 43

    Kinematic Optimization for the Design of a UR5 Robot End-Effector for Cardiac Tele-Ultrasonography

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    Robotic tele-examination is mainstream for solving the nowadays worsening shortage of physicians. However, many solutions are based on custom robotic arms, whereas using COTS arms could reduce costs and make such systems affordable. In this paper, we address the problem of the design of an end-effector for cardiac tele-ultrasonography, assuming the use of a popular and low-cost industrial robot such as the Universal Robot UR5. We use a kinematic optimization based on the manipulability measure taking into account the position of the robot base with respect to the patient, the number of degrees of freedom (DoFs), and the size of the end-effector. The constraints of the problem are the full inclusion of the examination area in the workspace and the possibility to orient the probe correctly. The results of this study show that, although the arm has 6 DoFs, an additive DoF of the end-effector improves the manipulability measure by more than 100%
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