ROHCNov 8, 2021

Wrapped Haptic Display for Communicating Physical Robot Learning

arXiv:2111.04542v11 citations
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work addresses the need for better communication in human-robot physical interaction, particularly for teaching robots, though it is incremental by focusing on haptic feedback as an alternative to visual methods.

The paper tackles the problem of making robot learning transparent to human teachers during physical interaction by introducing a soft haptic display that wraps around a robot arm, showing that users can accurately interpret haptic signals with an average Weber fraction of 11.4% and improve demonstration quality in learning tasks.

Physical interaction between humans and robots can help robots learn to perform complex tasks. The robot arm gains information by observing how the human kinesthetically guides it throughout the task. While prior works focus on how the robot learns, it is equally important that this learning is transparent to the human teacher. Visual displays that show the robot's uncertainty can potentially communicate this information; however, we hypothesize that visual feedback mechanisms miss out on the physical connection between the human and robot. In this work we present a soft haptic display that wraps around and conforms to the surface of a robot arm, adding a haptic signal at an existing point of contact without significantly affecting the interaction. We demonstrate how soft actuation creates a salient haptic signal while still allowing flexibility in device mounting. Using a psychophysics experiment, we show that users can accurately distinguish inflation levels of the wrapped display with an average Weber fraction of 11.4%. When we place the wrapped display around the arm of a robotic manipulator, users are able to interpret and leverage the haptic signal in sample robot learning tasks, improving identification of areas where the robot needs more training and enabling the user to provide better demonstrations. See videos of our device and user studies here: https://youtu.be/tX-2Tqeb9Nw

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