32.1ROApr 19
Contact-Rich Robotic Assembly in Construction via Diffusion Policy LearningSalma Mozaffari, Daniel Ruan, William van den Bogert et al. · princeton
Fabrication uncertainty arising from tolerance accumulation, material imperfection, and positioning errors remains a critical barrier to automated robotic assembly in construction, particularly for contact-rich manipulation tasks governed by friction and geometric constraints. This paper investigates the deployment of diffusion policy learning on construction-scale industrial robots to enable robust, high-precision assembly under such uncertainty, using tight-fitting mortise and tenon timber joinery as a representative case study. Sensory-motor diffusion policies are trained using teleoperated demonstrations collected from an industrial robotic workcell equipped with force/torque sensing. A two-phase experimental study evaluates baseline performance and robustness under randomized positional perturbations up to 10 mm, far exceeding the sub-millimeter joint clearance. The best-performing policy achieved 100% success under nominal conditions and 75% average success under uncertainty. These results provide initial evidence that diffusion policies compensate for misalignments through contact-aware control, representing a step toward robust robotic assembly in construction under tight tolerances.
ROSep 23, 2024
Built Different: Tactile Perception to Overcome Cross-Embodiment Capability Differences in Collaborative ManipulationWilliam van den Bogert, Madhavan Iyengar, Nima Fazeli
Tactile sensing is a widely-studied means of implicit communication between robot and human. In this paper, we investigate how tactile sensing can help bridge differences between robotic embodiments in the context of collaborative manipulation. For a robot, learning and executing force-rich collaboration require compliance to human interaction. While compliance is often achieved with admittance control, many commercial robots lack the joint torque monitoring needed for such control. To address this challenge, we present an approach that uses tactile sensors and behavior cloning to transfer policies from robots with these capabilities to those without. We train a single policy that demonstrates positive transfer across embodiments, including robots without torque sensing. We demonstrate this positive transfer on four different tactile-enabled embodiments using the same policy trained on force-controlled robot data. Across multiple proposed metrics, the best performance came from a decomposed tactile shear-field representation combined with a pre-trained encoder, which improved success rates over alternative representations.