Vladimir Shirokun

2papers

2 Papers

ROFeb 7, 2021
DroneTrap: Drone Catching in Midair by Soft Robotic Hand with Color-Based Force Detection and Hand Gesture Recognition

Aleksey Fedoseev, Valerii Serpiva, Ekaterina Karmanova et al.

The paper proposes a novel concept of docking drones to make this process as safe and fast as possible. The idea behind the project is that a robot with a soft gripper grasps the drone in midair. The human operator navigates the robotic arm with the ML-based gesture recognition interface. The 3-finger robot hand with soft fingers is equipped with touch sensors, making it possible to achieve safe drone catching and avoid inadvertent damage to the drone's propellers and motors. Additionally, the soft hand is featured with a unique color-based force estimation technology based on a computer vision (CV) system. Moreover, the visual color-changing system makes it easier for the human operator to interpret the applied forces. Without any additional programming, the operator has full real-time control of the robot's motion and task execution by wearing a mocap glove with gesture recognition, which was developed and applied for the high-level control of DroneTrap. The experimental results revealed that the developed color-based force estimation can be applied for rigid object capturing with high precision (95.3\%). The proposed technology can potentially revolutionize the landing and deployment of drones for parcel delivery on uneven ground, structure maintenance and inspection, risque operations, and etc.

ROAug 7, 2019
DronePick: Object Picking and Delivery Teleoperation with the Drone Controlled by a Wearable Tactile Display

Roman Ibrahimov, Evgeny Tsykunov, Vladimir Shirokun et al.

We report on the teleoperation system DronePick which provides remote object picking and delivery by a human-controlled quadcopter. The main novelty of the proposed system is that the human user continuously gets the visual and haptic feedback for accurate teleoperation. DronePick consists of a quadcopter equipped with a magnetic grabber, a tactile glove with finger motion tracking sensor, hand tracking system, and the Virtual Reality (VR) application. The human operator teleoperates the quadcopter by changing the position of the hand. The proposed vibrotactile patterns representing the location of the remote object relative to the quadcopter are delivered to the glove. It helps the operator to determine when the quadcopter is right above the object. When the "pick" command is sent by clasping the hand in the glove, the quadcopter decreases its altitude and the magnetic grabber attaches the target object. The whole scenario is in parallel simulated in VR. The air flow from the quadcopter and the relative positions of VR objects help the operator to determine the exact position of the delivered object to be picked. The experiments showed that the vibrotactile patterns were recognized by the users at the high recognition rates: the average 99% recognition rate and the average 2.36s recognition time. The real-life implementation of DronePick featuring object picking and delivering to the human was developed and tested.