ROFeb 27, 2025
Sensor-Invariant Tactile RepresentationHarsh Gupta, Yuchen Mo, Shengmiao Jin et al.
High-resolution tactile sensors have become critical for embodied perception and robotic manipulation. However, a key challenge in the field is the lack of transferability between sensors due to design and manufacturing variations, which result in significant differences in tactile signals. This limitation hinders the ability to transfer models or knowledge learned from one sensor to another. To address this, we introduce a novel method for extracting Sensor-Invariant Tactile Representations (SITR), enabling zero-shot transfer across optical tactile sensors. Our approach utilizes a transformer-based architecture trained on a diverse dataset of simulated sensor designs, allowing it to generalize to new sensors in the real world with minimal calibration. Experimental results demonstrate the method's effectiveness across various tactile sensing applications, facilitating data and model transferability for future advancements in the field.
ROFeb 4, 2025
Learning to Double Guess: An Active Perception Approach for Estimating the Center of Mass of Arbitrary ObjectsShengmiao Jin, Yuchen Mo, Wenzhen Yuan
Manipulating arbitrary objects in unstructured environments is a significant challenge in robotics, primarily due to difficulties in determining an object's center of mass. This paper introduces U-GRAPH: Uncertainty-Guided Rotational Active Perception with Haptics, a novel framework to enhance the center of mass estimation using active perception. Traditional methods often rely on single interaction and are limited by the inherent inaccuracies of Force-Torque (F/T) sensors. Our approach circumvents these limitations by integrating a Bayesian Neural Network (BNN) to quantify uncertainty and guide the robotic system through multiple, information-rich interactions via grid search and a neural network that scores each action. We demonstrate the remarkable generalizability and transferability of our method with training on a small dataset with limited variation yet still perform well on unseen complex real-world objects.