Title :
Open-loop bilateral teleoperation for stable force tracking
Author :
Shull, Pete ; Niemeyer, Günter
Author_Institution :
Telerobotics Lab. & the Dextrous Manipulation Lab., Stanford Univ. in Stanford, Stanford, CA, USA
Abstract :
Traditional bilateral teleoperation communicates both motion and force information explicitly between master and slave devices. Any such closed loop architecture trades off performance with potential instability, especially when using force measurements of high inertia slaves contacting stiff environments. More conservatively, open-loop architectures avoid stability issues, transmitting motion commands while allowing any force feedback only via sensory substitution. We propose open-loop bilateral teleoperation as an alternative communicating force information explicitly and restricting motion information to visual feedback. This naturally matches a user´s needs, seeing motion and feeling forces. A user study was conducted to compare the novel user interface to three common open loop and bilateral control methods: position control, position control with force feedback, and rate control. The results of this study show that users are able to achieve superior force tracking with little tremor. Position tracking and trial completion time suffered from the lack of direct position connection, but training provides a promising method to restore this performance.
Keywords :
force feedback; open loop systems; position control; telerobotics; user interfaces; bilateral telerobotic systems; force feedback; open-loop architectures; open-loop bilateral teleoperation; position control; position tracking; rate control; stable force tracking; user interface; visual feedback; Force control; Force feedback; Force measurement; Force sensors; Master-slave; Open loop systems; Position control; Stability; Tracking; USA Councils;
Conference_Titel :
Intelligent Robots and Systems, 2009. IROS 2009. IEEE/RSJ International Conference on
Conference_Location :
St. Louis, MO
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-3803-7
Electronic_ISBN :
978-1-4244-3804-4
DOI :
10.1109/IROS.2009.5354085