ROJan 5, 2018

On the manipulation of articulated objects in human-robot cooperation scenarios

arXiv:1801.01757v237 citations
AI Analysis

This addresses manipulation problems in home and industrial settings, but it is incremental as it builds on existing planning and cooperation methods.

The paper tackles the challenge of robot manipulation of articulated and flexible objects by proposing an action planning and execution framework that integrates abstract representations and human-robot cooperation, demonstrating results in planning performance and collaborative examples with a Baxter manipulator.

Articulated and flexible objects constitute a challenge for robot manipulation tasks but are present in different real-world settings, including home and industrial environments. Current approaches to the manipulation of articulated and flexible objects employ ad hoc strategies to sequence and perform actions on them depending on a number of physical or geometrical characteristics related to those objects, as well as on an a priori classification of target object configurations. In this paper, we propose an action planning and execution framework, which (i) considers abstract representations of articulated or flexible objects, (ii) integrates action planning to reason upon such configurations and to sequence an appropriate set of actions with the aim of obtaining a target configuration provided as a goal, and (iii) is able to cooperate with humans to collaboratively carry out the plan. On the one hand, we show that a trade-off exists between the way articulated or flexible objects are perceived and how the system represents them. Such a trade-off greatly impacts on the complexity of the planning process. On the other hand, we demonstrate the system's capabilities in allowing humans to interrupt robot action execution, and - in general - to contribute to the whole manipulation process. Results related to planning performance are discussed, and examples of a Baxter dual-arm manipulator performing actions collaboratively with humans are shown.

Foundations

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