12.6ROMar 16
User-Tailored Learning to Forecast Walking Modes for ExosuitsGabriele Abbate, Enrica Tricomi, Nathalie Gierden et al.
Assistive robotic devices, like soft lower-limb exoskeletons or exosuits, are widely spreading with the promise of helping people in everyday life. To make such systems adaptive to the variety of users wearing them, it is desirable to endow exosuits with advanced perception systems. However, exosuits have little sensory equipment because they need to be light and easy to wear. This paper presents a perception module based on machine learning that aims at estimating 3 walking modes (i.e., ascending or descending stairs and walking on level ground) of users wearing an exosuit. We tackle this perception problem using only inertial data from two sensors. Our approach provides an estimate for both future and past timesteps that supports control and enables a self-labeling procedure for online model adaptation. Indeed, we show that our estimate can label data acquired online and refine the model for new users. A thorough analysis carried out on real-life datasets shows the effectiveness of our user-tailored perception module. Finally, we integrate our system with the exosuit in a closed-loop controller, validating its performance in an online single-subject experiment.
13.5ROMay 13
Exploring Human-Robot Collaboration: Analysis of Interaction Modalities in Challenging TasksSimone Arreghini, Cristina Iani, Alessandro Giusti et al.
This work compares three interaction modalities for human-robot collaboration: passive, reactive, and proactive. We studied 18 participants assembling a seven-layer colored tower from memory while using nearby and distant blocks. In the passive modality participants worked alone; in the reactive modality a mobile robot helped only upon request; in the proactive modality it initiated brick delivery and error signaling without explicit requests. Although robot assistance increased completion time, most participants preferred collaboration: 67% preferred proactive behavior and 78% judged it most useful. These results suggest that timely proactive support can improve user experience in controlled collaborative tasks.
ROApr 2, 2024
Predicting the Intention to Interact with a Service Robot:the Role of Gaze CuesSimone Arreghini, Gabriele Abbate, Alessandro Giusti et al.
For a service robot, it is crucial to perceive as early as possible that an approaching person intends to interact: in this case, it can proactively enact friendly behaviors that lead to an improved user experience. We solve this perception task with a sequence-to-sequence classifier of a potential user intention to interact, which can be trained in a self-supervised way. Our main contribution is a study of the benefit of features representing the person's gaze in this context. Extensive experiments on a novel dataset show that the inclusion of gaze cues significantly improves the classifier performance (AUROC increases from 84.5% to 91.2%); the distance at which an accurate classification can be achieved improves from 2.4 m to 3.2 m. We also quantify the system's ability to adapt to new environments without external supervision. Qualitative experiments show practical applications with a waiter robot.
ROMar 7, 2025
A Map-free Deep Learning-based Framework for Gate-to-Gate Monocular Visual Navigation aboard Miniaturized Aerial VehiclesLorenzo Scarciglia, Antonio Paolillo, Daniele Palossi
Palm-sized autonomous nano-drones, i.e., sub-50g in weight, recently entered the drone racing scenario, where they are tasked to avoid obstacles and navigate as fast as possible through gates. However, in contrast with their bigger counterparts, i.e., kg-scale drones, nano-drones expose three orders of magnitude less onboard memory and compute power, demanding more efficient and lightweight vision-based pipelines to win the race. This work presents a map-free vision-based (using only a monocular camera) autonomous nano-drone that combines a real-time deep learning gate detection front-end with a classic yet elegant and effective visual servoing control back-end, only relying on onboard resources. Starting from two state-of-the-art tiny deep learning models, we adapt them for our specific task, and after a mixed simulator-real-world training, we integrate and deploy them aboard our nano-drone. Our best-performing pipeline costs of only 24M multiply-accumulate operations per frame, resulting in a closed-loop control performance of 30 Hz, while achieving a gate detection root mean square error of 1.4 pixels, on our ~20k real-world image dataset. In-field experiments highlight the capability of our nano-drone to successfully navigate through 15 gates in 4 min, never crashing and covering a total travel distance of ~100m, with a peak flight speed of 1.9 m/s. Finally, to stress the generalization capability of our system, we also test it in a never-seen-before environment, where it navigates through gates for more than 4 min.
ROFeb 28, 2025
Sixth-Sense: Self-Supervised Learning of Spatial Awareness of Humans from a Planar LidarSimone Arreghini, Nicholas Carlotti, Mirko Nava et al.
Localizing humans is a key prerequisite for any service robot operating in proximity to people. In these scenarios, robots rely on a multitude of state-of-the-art detectors usually designed to operate with RGB-D cameras or expensive 3D LiDARs. However, most commercially available service robots are equipped with cameras with a narrow field of view, making them blind when a user is approaching from other directions, or inexpensive 1D LiDARs whose readings are difficult to interpret. To address these limitations, we propose a self-supervised approach to detect humans and estimate their 2D pose from 1D LiDAR data, using detections from an RGB-D camera as a supervision source. Our approach aims to provide service robots with spatial awareness of nearby humans. After training on 70 minutes of data autonomously collected in two environments, our model is capable of detecting humans omnidirectionally from 1D LiDAR data in a novel environment, with 71% precision and 80% recall, while retaining an average absolute error of 13 cm in distance and 44° in orientation.
RONov 14, 2024
Learning Hand State Estimation for a Light ExoskeletonGabriele Abbate, Alessandro Giusti, Luca Randazzo et al.
We propose a machine learning-based estimator of the hand state for rehabilitation purposes, using light exoskeletons. These devices are easy to use and useful for delivering domestic and frequent therapies. We build a supervised approach using information from the muscular activity of the forearm and the motion of the exoskeleton to reconstruct the hand's opening degree and compliance level. Such information can be used to evaluate the therapy progress and develop adaptive control behaviors. Our approach is validated with a real light exoskeleton. The experiments demonstrate good predictive performance of our approach when trained on data coming from a single user and tested on the same user, even across different sessions. This generalization capability makes our system promising for practical use in real rehabilitation.
ROMar 22, 2021
Uncertainty-Aware Self-Supervised Learning of Spatial Perception TasksMirko Nava, Antonio Paolillo, Jérôme Guzzi et al.
We propose a general self-supervised learning approach for spatial perception tasks, such as estimating the pose of an object relative to the robot, from onboard sensor readings. The model is learned from training episodes, by relying on: a continuous state estimate, possibly inaccurate and affected by odometry drift; and a detector, that sporadically provides supervision about the target pose. We demonstrate the general approach in three different concrete scenarios: a simulated robot arm that visually estimates the pose of an object of interest; a small differential drive robot using 7 infrared sensors to localize a nearby wall; an omnidirectional mobile robot that localizes itself in an environment from camera images. Quantitative results show that the approach works well in all three scenarios, and that explicitly accounting for uncertainty yields statistically significant performance improvements.
ROJan 31, 2020
A memory of motion for visual predictive control tasksAntonio Paolillo, Teguh Santoso Lembono, Sylvain Calinon
This paper addresses the problem of efficiently achieving visual predictive control tasks. To this end, a memory of motion, containing a set of trajectories built off-line, is used for leveraging precomputation and dealing with difficult visual tasks. Standard regression techniques, such as k-nearest neighbors and Gaussian process regression, are used to query the memory and provide on-line a warm-start and a way point to the control optimization process. The proposed technique allows the control scheme to achieve high performance and, at the same time, keep the computational time limited. Simulation and experimental results, carried out with a 7-axis manipulator, show the effectiveness of the approach.
ROJul 2, 2019
Memory of Motion for Warm-starting Trajectory OptimizationTeguh Santoso Lembono, Antonio Paolillo, Emmanuel Pignat et al.
Trajectory optimization for motion planning requires good initial guesses to obtain good performance. In our proposed approach, we build a memory of motion based on a database of robot paths to provide good initial guesses. The memory of motion relies on function approximators and dimensionality reduction techniques to learn the mapping between the tasks and the robot paths. Three function approximators are compared: $k$-Nearest Neighbor, Gaussian Process Regression, and Bayesian Gaussian Mixture Regression. In addition, we show that the memory can be used as a metric to choose between several possible goals, and using an ensemble method to combine different function approximators results in a significantly improved warm-starting performance. We demonstrate the proposed approach with motion planning examples on the dual-arm robot PR2 and the humanoid robot Atlas.