ROMay 26, 2018

Contact-Aided Invariant Extended Kalman Filtering for Legged Robot State Estimation

arXiv:1805.10410v161 citations
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

It improves state estimation accuracy for legged robots, which is crucial for stable locomotion and navigation, but is incremental as it builds on existing invariant observer theory.

This paper tackles state estimation for legged robots by developing a contact-aided invariant extended Kalman filter (InEKF) that exploits symmetries in system dynamics, resulting in better performance compared to a quaternion-based EKF in simulations and experiments on a Cassie-series bipedal robot.

This paper derives a contact-aided inertial navigation observer for a 3D bipedal robot using the theory of invariant observer design. Aided inertial navigation is fundamentally a nonlinear observer design problem; thus, current solutions are based on approximations of the system dynamics, such as an Extended Kalman Filter (EKF), which uses a system's Jacobian linearization along the current best estimate of its trajectory. On the basis of the theory of invariant observer design by Barrau and Bonnabel, and in particular, the Invariant EKF (InEKF), we show that the error dynamics of the point contact-inertial system follows a log-linear autonomous differential equation; hence, the observable state variables can be rendered convergent with a domain of attraction that is independent of the system's trajectory. Due to the log-linear form of the error dynamics, it is not necessary to perform a nonlinear observability analysis to show that when using an Inertial Measurement Unit (IMU) and contact sensors, the absolute position of the robot and a rotation about the gravity vector (yaw) are unobservable. We further augment the state of the developed InEKF with IMU biases, as the online estimation of these parameters has a crucial impact on system performance. We evaluate the convergence of the proposed system with the commonly used quaternion-based EKF observer using a Monte-Carlo simulation. In addition, our experimental evaluation using a Cassie-series bipedal robot shows that the contact-aided InEKF provides better performance in comparison with the quaternion-based EKF as a result of exploiting symmetries present in the system dynamics.

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