Robotic Grasping of Harvested Tomato Trusses Using Vision and Online Learning
This addresses the labor-intensive task of tomato weighing and packaging for agricultural automation, representing a strong domain-specific advancement.
The paper tackled the problem of automating robotic grasping of harvested tomato trusses in cluttered crates, achieving a 100% clearance rate and 93% first-try success rate using a vision system with online learning.
Currently, truss tomato weighing and packaging require significant manual work. The main obstacle to automation lies in the difficulty of developing a reliable robotic grasping system for already harvested trusses. We propose a method to grasp trusses that are stacked in a crate with considerable clutter, which is how they are commonly stored and transported after harvest. The method consists of a deep learning-based vision system to first identify the individual trusses in the crate and then determine a suitable grasping location on the stem. To this end, we have introduced a grasp pose ranking algorithm with online learning capabilities. After selecting the most promising grasp pose, the robot executes a pinch grasp without needing touch sensors or geometric models. Lab experiments with a robotic manipulator equipped with an eye-in-hand RGB-D camera showed a 100% clearance rate when tasked to pick all trusses from a pile. 93% of the trusses were successfully grasped on the first try, while the remaining 7% required more attempts.