Yash Shahapurkar

2papers

2 Papers

57.1ROMay 25
Closing the Loop in Teleoperation: Episode-Level Data Quality Assessment and Feedback for High-Quality Demonstration Collection

Gokul Narayanan, Yash Shahapurkar, Melih Erdogan et al.

Industrial automation is at a pivotal moment, as Physical AI is driving a transition from rigid, hand-engineered automation systems toward more flexible and adaptive systems. This shift has created a growing demand for large-scale, real-world robot demonstration data, making teleoperation an increasingly important mechanism for data collection. However, high-quality teleoperated demonstrations remain difficult to obtain in practice, as novice operators often produce episodes that are task-successful but suboptimal for downstream use due to inefficient motion, repeated corrections, or operation near robot joint limits. We present a Data Quality Assessment and Feedback (DQAF) framework that closes the loop in teleoperation by providing immediate post-episode feedback grounded in semantic task progress and robot telemetry. The framework extracts quality relevant signals such as sub-task progress, motion smoothness, stalls, kinematic limits and converts them into structured quality assessments and actionable natural-language feedback. Unlike binary success or failure feedback, the proposed system explains why an episode is suboptimal and highlights specific behaviors to correct in the next trial. We evaluate the framework through a diagnostic validation study and a pilot user study. In the validation study, the system is compared with a human reviewer during dataset curation, producing rejection reasons and actionable feedback for improvement. In the pilot study with three novice operators across two manipulation tasks, the operator who received the systems immediate, automated post-episode feedback improved faster than those who did not, producing higher-quality demonstrations sooner.

ROApr 21, 2020
Industrial Robot Grasping with Deep Learning using a Programmable Logic Controller (PLC)

Eugen Solowjow, Ines Ugalde, Yash Shahapurkar et al.

Universal grasping of a diverse range of previously unseen objects from heaps is a grand challenge in e-commerce order fulfillment, manufacturing, and home service robotics. Recently, deep learning based grasping approaches have demonstrated results that make them increasingly interesting for industrial deployments. This paper explores the problem from an automation systems point-of-view. We develop a robotics grasping system using Dex-Net, which is fully integrated at the controller level. Two neural networks are deployed on a novel industrial AI hardware acceleration module close to a PLC with a power footprint of less than 10 W for the overall system. The software is tightly integrated with the hardware allowing for fast and efficient data processing and real-time communication. The success rate of grasping an object form a bin is up to 95 percent with more than 350 picks per hour, if object and receptive bins are in close proximity. The system was presented at the Hannover Fair 2019 (world s largest industrial trade fair) and other events, where it performed over 5,000 grasps per event.