ROFeb 28, 2021

Simultaneous Tactile Exploration and Grasp Refinement for Unknown Objects

arXiv:2103.00655v148 citations
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This addresses the problem of robotic manipulation of unknown objects for applications in unstructured environments, representing an incremental improvement over existing methods.

This paper tackles the problem of robots grasping unknown objects with partial visual information by simultaneously exploring object shape using tactile sensors and refining grasp stability. The proposed approach yields more efficient stable grasps and improved shape estimates compared to a baseline method.

This paper addresses the problem of simultaneously exploring an unknown object to model its shape, using tactile sensors on robotic fingers, while also improving finger placement to optimise grasp stability. In many situations, a robot will have only a partial camera view of the near side of an observed object, for which the far side remains occluded. We show how an initial grasp attempt, based on an initial guess of the overall object shape, yields tactile glances of the far side of the object which enable the shape estimate and consequently the successive grasps to be improved. We propose a grasp exploration approach using a probabilistic representation of shape, based on Gaussian Process Implicit Surfaces. This representation enables initial partial vision data to be augmented with additional data from successive tactile glances. This is combined with a probabilistic estimate of grasp quality to refine grasp configurations. When choosing the next set of finger placements, a bi-objective optimisation method is used to mutually maximise grasp quality and improve shape representation during successive grasp attempts. Experimental results show that the proposed approach yields stable grasp configurations more efficiently than a baseline method, while also yielding improved shape estimate of the grasped object.

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