Mimo Shirasaka

2papers

2 Papers

9.5ROMay 17
Robust and Resilient Soft Robotic Object Insertion with Compliance-Enabled Contact Formation and Failure Recovery

Mimo Shirasaka, Cristian C. Beltran-Hernandez, Masashi Hamaya et al.

Object insertion tasks are prone to failure under pose uncertainty and environmental variation, often requiring manual fine-tuning or controller retraining. We present a novel approach for robust and resilient object insertion using a passively compliant soft wrist that enables safe contact absorption through large deformations, without high-frequency control or force sensing. Our method structures insertion as compliance-enabled contact formations, sequential contact states that progressively constrain degrees of freedom, and integrates automated failure recovery strategies. Our key insight is that wrist compliance permits safe, repeated recovery attempts; hence, we refer to it as compliance-enabled failure recovery. We employ a pre-trained vision-language model (VLM) that assesses each skill execution from terminal poses and images, identifies failure modes, and proposes recovery actions by selecting skills and updating goals. In simulation, our method achieved an 83% success rate, recovering from failures induced by randomized conditions, including grasp misalignments up to 5 degrees, hole-pose errors up to 20 mm, fivefold increases in friction, and unseen square/rectangular pegs, and we further validated the approach on a real robot. Project page is available at https://omron-sinicx.github.io/compliance-enabled-failure-recovery/.

ROSep 25, 2023
Self-Recovery Prompting: Promptable General Purpose Service Robot System with Foundation Models and Self-Recovery

Mimo Shirasaka, Tatsuya Matsushima, Soshi Tsunashima et al.

A general-purpose service robot (GPSR), which can execute diverse tasks in various environments, requires a system with high generalizability and adaptability to tasks and environments. In this paper, we first developed a top-level GPSR system for worldwide competition (RoboCup@Home 2023) based on multiple foundation models. This system is both generalizable to variations and adaptive by prompting each model. Then, by analyzing the performance of the developed system, we found three types of failure in more realistic GPSR application settings: insufficient information, incorrect plan generation, and plan execution failure. We then propose the self-recovery prompting pipeline, which explores the necessary information and modifies its prompts to recover from failure. We experimentally confirm that the system with the self-recovery mechanism can accomplish tasks by resolving various failure cases. Supplementary videos are available at https://sites.google.com/view/srgpsr .