ROFeb 19, 2019

Improving dual-arm assembly by master-slave compliance

arXiv:1902.07007v17 citations
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work addresses assembly tasks in robotics by enhancing efficiency through learned compliance, but it is incremental as it builds on existing learning from demonstration methods.

The paper tackles the problem of improving dual-arm assembly by optimizing compliance parameters, showing that having both manipulators compliant in rotation and translation reduces total joint motions and shortens task time compared to moving only one manipulator.

In this paper we show how different choices regarding compliance affect a dual-arm assembly task. In addition, we present how the compliance parameters can be learned from a human demonstration. Compliant motions can be used in assembly tasks to mitigate pose errors originating from, for example, inaccurate grasping. We present analytical background and accompanying experimental results on how to choose the center of compliance to enhance the convergence region of an alignment task. Then we present the possible ways of choosing the compliant axes for accomplishing alignment in a scenario where orientation error is present. We show that an earlier presented Learning from Demonstration method can be used to learn motion and compliance parameters of an impedance controller for both manipulators. The learning requires a human demonstration with a single teleoperated manipulator only, easing the execution of demonstration and enabling usage of manipulators at difficult locations as well. Finally, we experimentally verify our claim that having both manipulators compliant in both rotation and translation can accomplish the alignment task with less total joint motions and in shorter time than moving one manipulator only. In addition, we show that the learning method produces the parameters that achieve the best results in our experiments.

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