Pengxu Chang

h-index8
2papers

2 Papers

ROFeb 26, 2024
RobKiNet: Robotic Kinematics Informed Neural Network for Optimal Robot Configuration Prediction

Yanlong Peng, Zhigang Wang, Yisheng Zhang et al.

Task and Motion Planning (TAMP) is essential for robots to interact with the world and accomplish complex tasks. The TAMP problem involves a critical gap: exploring the robot's configuration parameters (such as chassis position and robotic arm joint angles) within continuous space to ensure that task-level global constraints are met while also enhancing the efficiency of subsequent motion planning. Existing methods still have significant room for improvement in terms of efficiency. Recognizing that robot kinematics is a key factor in motion planning, we propose a framework called the Robotic Kinematics Informed Neural Network (RobKiNet) as a bridge between task and motion layers. RobKiNet integrates kinematic knowledge into neural networks to train models capable of efficient configuration prediction. We designed a Chassis Motion Predictor(CMP) and a Full Motion Predictor(FMP) using RobKiNet, which employed two entirely different sets of forward and inverse kinematics constraints to achieve loosely coupled control and whole-body control, respectively. Experiments demonstrate that CMP and FMP can predict configuration parameters with 96.67% and 98% accuracy, respectively. That means that the corresponding motion planning can achieve a speedup of 24.24x and 153x compared to random sampling. Furthermore, RobKiNet demonstrates remarkable data efficiency. CMP only requires 1/71 and FMP only requires 1/15052 of the training data for the same prediction accuracy compared to other deep learning methods. These results demonstrate the great potential of RoboKiNet in robot applications.

ROSep 14, 2025
Embodied Intelligence in Disassembly: Multimodal Perception Cross-validation and Continual Learning in Neuro-Symbolic TAMP

Ziwen He, Zhigang Wang, Yanlong Peng et al.

With the rapid development of the new energy vehicle industry, the efficient disassembly and recycling of power batteries have become a critical challenge for the circular economy. In current unstructured disassembly scenarios, the dynamic nature of the environment severely limits the robustness of robotic perception, posing a significant barrier to autonomous disassembly in industrial applications. This paper proposes a continual learning framework based on Neuro-Symbolic task and motion planning (TAMP) to enhance the adaptability of embodied intelligence systems in dynamic environments. Our approach integrates a multimodal perception cross-validation mechanism into a bidirectional reasoning flow: the forward working flow dynamically refines and optimizes action strategies, while the backward learning flow autonomously collects effective data from historical task executions to facilitate continual system learning, enabling self-optimization. Experimental results show that the proposed framework improves the task success rate in dynamic disassembly scenarios from 81.68% to 100%, while reducing the average number of perception misjudgments from 3.389 to 1.128. This research provides a new paradigm for enhancing the robustness and adaptability of embodied intelligence in complex industrial environments.