32.4ROMay 19
Compliant Explicit Reference Governor for Contact Friendly Robotic ManipulatorsYaashia Gautam, Gilberto Briscoe-Martinez, Adhitya Mohan et al.
This paper introduces the Compliant Explicit Reference Governor (CERG), a modular reference management system that enables robots to interact physically with their environment under provable guarantees. The CERG is an intermediate layer that can be placed between a high-level planner and a low-level controller: it enforces operational constraints and enables smooth transitions between free-motion and contact operations. The CERG ensures safety by limiting the total energy available to the robotic arm at the time of contact. In the absence of contact, however, the CERG does not penalize the system performance. Simulation and hardware experiments validate the CERG on increasingly complex systems.
ROFeb 2
Moving On, Even When You're Broken: Fail-Active Trajectory Generation via Diffusion Policies Conditioned on Embodiment and TaskGilberto G. Briscoe-Martinez, Yaashia Gautam, Rahul Shetty et al.
Robot failure is detrimental and disruptive, often requiring human intervention to recover. Maintaining safe operation under impairment to achieve task completion, i.e. fail-active operation, is our target. Focusing on actuation failures, we introduce DEFT, a diffusion-based trajectory generator conditioned on the robot's current embodiment and task constraints. DEFT generalizes across failure types, supports constrained and unconstrained motions, and enables task completion under arbitrary failure. We evaluated DEFT in both simulation and real-world scenarios using a 7-DoF robotic arm. In simulation over thousands of joint-failure cases across multiple tasks, DEFT outperformed the baseline by up to 2 times. On failures unseen during training, it continued to outperform the baseline, indicating robust generalization in simulation. Further, we performed real-world evaluations on two multi-step tasks, drawer manipulation and whiteboard erasing. These experiments demonstrated DEFT succeeding on tasks where classical methods failed. Our results show that DEFT achieves fail-active manipulation across arbitrary failure configurations and real-world deployments.