Litcius/Paper detail

Variable In-Hand Manipulations for Tactile-Driven Robot Hand via CNN-LSTM

Satoshi Funabashi, Shun Ogasa, Tomoki Isobe, Tetsuya Ogata, Alexander Schmitz, Tito Pradhono Tomo, Shigeki Sugano

202014 citationsDOI

Abstract

Performing various in-hand manipulation tasks, without learning each individual task, would enable robots to act more versatile, while reducing the effort for training. However, in general it is difficult to achieve stable in-hand manipulation, because the contact state between the fingertips becomes difficult to model, especially for a robot hand with anthropomorphically shaped fingertips. Rich tactile feedback can aid the robust task execution, but on the other hand it is challenging to process high-dimensional tactile information. In the current paper we use two fingers of the Allegro hand, and each fingertip is anthropomorphically shaped and equipped not only with 6-axis force-torque (F/T) sensors, but also with uSkin tactile sensors, which provide 24 tri-axial measurements per fingertip. A convolutional neural network is used to process the high dimensional uSkin information, and a long short-term memory (LSTM) handles the time-series information. The network is trained to generate two different motions ("twist" and "push"). The desired motion is provided as a task-parameter to the network, with twist defined as -1 and push as +1. When values between -1 and +1 are used as the task parameter, the network is able to generate untrained motions in-between the two trained motions. Thereby, we can achieve multiple untrained manipulations, and can achieve robustness with high-dimensional tactile feedback.

Topics & Concepts

Computer scienceRobotTactile sensorRobustness (evolution)Artificial intelligenceProcess (computing)Task (project management)TorqueConvolutional neural networkComputer visionArtificial neural networkEngineeringPhysicsOperating systemChemistryBiochemistrySystems engineeringThermodynamicsGeneTactile and Sensory InteractionsRobot Manipulation and LearningMuscle activation and electromyography studies