CVMar 19, 2022
PressureVision: Estimating Hand Pressure from a Single RGB ImagePatrick Grady, Chengcheng Tang, Samarth Brahmbhatt et al. · gatech
People often interact with their surroundings by applying pressure with their hands. While hand pressure can be measured by placing pressure sensors between the hand and the environment, doing so can alter contact mechanics, interfere with human tactile perception, require costly sensors, and scale poorly to large environments. We explore the possibility of using a conventional RGB camera to infer hand pressure, enabling machine perception of hand pressure from uninstrumented hands and surfaces. The central insight is that the application of pressure by a hand results in informative appearance changes. Hands share biomechanical properties that result in similar observable phenomena, such as soft-tissue deformation, blood distribution, hand pose, and cast shadows. We collected videos of 36 participants with diverse skin tone applying pressure to an instrumented planar surface. We then trained a deep model (PressureVisionNet) to infer a pressure image from a single RGB image. Our model infers pressure for participants outside of the training data and outperforms baselines. We also show that the output of our model depends on the appearance of the hand and cast shadows near contact regions. Overall, our results suggest the appearance of a previously unobserved human hand can be used to accurately infer applied pressure. Data, code, and models are available online.
CVJan 5, 2023
PressureVision++: Estimating Fingertip Pressure from Diverse RGB ImagesPatrick Grady, Jeremy A. Collins, Chengcheng Tang et al. · gatech
Touch plays a fundamental role in manipulation for humans; however, machine perception of contact and pressure typically requires invasive sensors. Recent research has shown that deep models can estimate hand pressure based on a single RGB image. However, evaluations have been limited to controlled settings since collecting diverse data with ground-truth pressure measurements is difficult. We present a novel approach that enables diverse data to be captured with only an RGB camera and a cooperative participant. Our key insight is that people can be prompted to apply pressure in a certain way, and this prompt can serve as a weak label to supervise models to perform well under varied conditions. We collect a novel dataset with 51 participants making fingertip contact with diverse objects. Our network, PressureVision++, outperforms human annotators and prior work. We also demonstrate an application of PressureVision++ to mixed reality where pressure estimation allows everyday surfaces to be used as arbitrary touch-sensitive interfaces. Code, data, and models are available online.
ROOct 5, 2023
The Un-Kidnappable Robot: Acoustic Localization of Sneaking PeopleMengyu Yang, Patrick Grady, Samarth Brahmbhatt et al.
How easy is it to sneak up on a robot? We examine whether we can detect people using only the incidental sounds they produce as they move, even when they try to be quiet. We collect a robotic dataset of high-quality 4-channel audio paired with 360 degree RGB data of people moving in different indoor settings. We train models that predict if there is a moving person nearby and their location using only audio. We implement our method on a robot, allowing it to track a single person moving quietly with only passive audio sensing. For demonstration videos, see our project page: https://sites.google.com/view/unkidnappable-robot
25.2CVApr 23
Robust Camera-to-Mocap Calibration and Verification for Large-Scale Multi-Camera Data CaptureTianyi Liu, Christopher Twigg, Patrick Grady et al.
Optical motion capture (mocap) systems are widely used for ground-truth capture in AR/VR, SLAM and robotics datasets. These datasets require extrinsic calibration to align mocap coordinates to external camera frames -- a step that is subject to multiple sources of error in practice, and failures often go undetected until they corrupt downstream data. These issues are compounded for fisheye cameras, where spatially non-uniform distortion makes both calibration and verification more challenging. We present a calibration and verification system designed for this setting. Concretely, we target robustness to board-to-marker attachment variation, optimization initialization ambiguity, and session-to-session calibration drift after deployment. The calibration jointly estimates camera extrinsics and the board-to-marker transform, and uses a staged solver to improve convergence reliability under ambiguous initialization. The verification component, \lollypop, provides fast, operator-independent assessment through a measurement chain entirely independent of the calibration data. In experiments on a Meta Quest 3 headset with fisheye cameras, our calibration outperforms existing benchwork, and lollypop reliably detects calibration degradation over time. The system has been deployed in production data collection pipelines.
CVMay 20, 2021
BodyPressure -- Inferring Body Pose and Contact Pressure from a Depth ImageHenry M. Clever, Patrick Grady, Greg Turk et al.
Contact pressure between the human body and its surroundings has important implications. For example, it plays a role in comfort, safety, posture, and health. We present a method that infers contact pressure between a human body and a mattress from a depth image. Specifically, we focus on using a depth image from a downward facing camera to infer pressure on a body at rest in bed occluded by bedding, which is directly applicable to the prevention of pressure injuries in healthcare. Our approach involves augmenting a real dataset with synthetic data generated via a soft-body physics simulation of a human body, a mattress, a pressure sensing mat, and a blanket. We introduce a novel deep network that we trained on an augmented dataset and evaluated with real data. The network contains an embedded human body mesh model and uses a white-box model of depth and pressure image generation. Our network successfully infers body pose, outperforming prior work. It also infers contact pressure across a 3D mesh model of the human body, which is a novel capability, and does so in the presence of occlusion from blankets.
CVApr 15, 2021
ContactOpt: Optimizing Contact to Improve GraspsPatrick Grady, Chengcheng Tang, Christopher D. Twigg et al.
Physical contact between hands and objects plays a critical role in human grasps. We show that optimizing the pose of a hand to achieve expected contact with an object can improve hand poses inferred via image-based methods. Given a hand mesh and an object mesh, a deep model trained on ground truth contact data infers desirable contact across the surfaces of the meshes. Then, ContactOpt efficiently optimizes the pose of the hand to achieve desirable contact using a differentiable contact model. Notably, our contact model encourages mesh interpenetration to approximate deformable soft tissue in the hand. In our evaluations, our methods result in grasps that better match ground truth contact, have lower kinematic error, and are significantly preferred by human participants. Code and models are available online.
ROSep 14, 2019
Learning to Collaborate from Simulation for Robot-Assisted DressingAlexander Clegg, Zackory Erickson, Patrick Grady et al.
We investigated the application of haptic feedback control and deep reinforcement learning (DRL) to robot-assisted dressing. Our method uses DRL to simultaneously train human and robot control policies as separate neural networks using physics simulations. In addition, we modeled variations in human impairments relevant to dressing, including unilateral muscle weakness, involuntary arm motion, and limited range of motion. Our approach resulted in control policies that successfully collaborate in a variety of simulated dressing tasks involving a hospital gown and a T-shirt. In addition, our approach resulted in policies trained in simulation that enabled a real PR2 robot to dress the arm of a humanoid robot with a hospital gown. We found that training policies for specific impairments dramatically improved performance; that controller execution speed could be scaled after training to reduce the robot's speed without steep reductions in performance; that curriculum learning could be used to lower applied forces; and that multi-modal sensing, including a simulated capacitive sensor, improved performance.