Refine
Document Type
- Conference Proceeding (4) (remove)
Language
- English (4)
Has Fulltext
- no (4)
Is part of the Bibliography
- no (4)
Institute
Integrating Orientation Constraints into the Attractor Dynamics Approach for Autonomous Manipulation
(2010)
Generating collision free reaching movements for redundant manipulators using dynamical systems
(2010)
For autonomous robots to manipulate objects in unknown environments, they must be able to move their arms without colliding with nearby objects, other agents or humans. The simultaneous avoidance of multiple obstacles in real time by all link segments of a manipulator is still a hard task both in practice and in theory. We present a systematic scheme for the generation of collision free movements for redundant manipulators in scenes with arbitrarily many obstacles. Based on the dynamical systems approach to robotics, constraints are formulated as contributions to a dynamical system that erect attractors for targets and repellors for obstacles. These contributions are formulated in terms of variables relevant to each constraint and then transformed into vector fields over the manipulator joint velocity vector as an embedding space in which all constraints are simultaneously observed. We demonstrate the feasibility of the approach by implementing it on a real anthropomorphic 8-degrees-of-freedom redundant manipulator. In addition, performance is characterized by detecting failures in a systematic simulation experiment in randomized scenes with varying numbers of obstacles.
Generating flexible collision-free reaching move-
ments is a standard task for autonomous articulated robots that
is critical especially when such systems interact with humans in
a service robotics setting. Current solutions are still challenging
to put into practice. Here we generalize an approach
first
used to plan end-effector movement that is based on attractor
dynamical systems. We show, how different contributions to
the motion planning dynamics can be formulated in constraint-
specific reference frames and then transformed into the frame
of the joint velocity vector. We implement this system on an
8 DoF redundant manipulator and show its feasibility in a
simulation. A systematic experiment with randomly generated
obstacle scenes characterizes the performance of the system.
Especially challenging confi
gurations of obstacles are discussed
to illustrate how the method solves these cases