RODec 15, 2015

Analyzing the Utility of a Support Pin in Sequential Robotic Manipulation

arXiv:1512.04891v318 citations
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This is an incremental improvement for robotics manipulation, addressing constraints like kinematics and collisions in tasks requiring object reorientation.

The paper tackles the problem of limited reorientation capability in robotic pick-and-place regrasping by introducing a vertical pin as an intermediate placement, resulting in improved success rates and shorter regrasp sequences in experiments.

Pick-and-place regrasp is an important manipulation skill for a robot. It helps a robot accomplish tasks that cannot be achieved within a single grasp, due to constraints such as kinematics or collisions between the robot and the environment. Previous work on pick-and-place regrasp only leveraged flat surfaces for intermediate placements, and thus is limited in the capability to reorient an object. In this paper, we extend the reorientation capability of a pick-and-place regrasp by adding a vertical pin on the working surface and using it as the intermediate location for regrasping. In particular, our method automatically computes the stable placements of an object leaning against a vertical pin, finds several force-closure grasps, generates a graph of regrasp actions, and searches for the regrasp sequence. To compare the regrasping performance with and without using pins, we evaluate the success rate and the length of regrasp sequences while performing tasks on various models. Experiments on reorientation and assembly tasks validate the benefit of using support pins for regrasping.

Foundations

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