Title :
Measuring intent in human-robot cooperative manipulation
Author :
De Carli, Davide ; Hohert, Evan ; Parker, Chris A C ; Zoghbi, Susana ; Leonard, Simon ; Croft, Elizabeth ; Bicchi, Antonio
Author_Institution :
Interdepartmental Res. Center E. Piaggio, Univ. of Pisa, Pisa, Italy
Abstract :
To effectively interact with people in a physically assistive role, robots will need to be able to cooperatively manipulate objects with a human partner. For example, it can be very difficult for an individual to manipulate a long or heavy object. An assistant can help to share the load, and improve the maneuverability of the object. Each partner can communicate objectives (e.g., move around an obstacle or put the object down) via non-verbal cues (e.g., moving the end of the object in a particular direction, changing speed, or tugging). Herein, non-verbal communication in a human-robot coordinated manipulation task is addressed using a small articulated robot arm equipped with a 6-axis wrist mounted force/torque sensor and joint angle encoders. The robot controller uses a Jacobian Transpose velocity PD control scheme with gravity compensation. To aid collaborative manipulation we implement a uniform impedance controller at the robot end-effector with an attractive force to a virtual path in the style of a cobot. Unlike a cobot, this path is recomputed online as a function of user input. In our present research, we utilize force/torque sensor measurements to identify intentional user communications specifying a change in the task direction. We consider the impact of path recomputation and the resulting robot haptic feedback on user physiological response.
Keywords :
Jacobian matrices; PD control; end effectors; feedback; force control; force sensors; human-robot interaction; torque control; velocity control; 6-axis wrist mounted force sensor; Jacobian Transpose velocity PD control; articulated robot arm; assistive robot; attractive force; cobot; cooperative object manipulation; gravity compensation; human-robot cooperative manipulation; intent measurement; intentional user communication; joint angle encoder; load sharing; nonverbal communication; nonverbal cues; object maneuverability; path recomputation; physical assistive role; robot controller; robot end-effector; robot haptic feedback; task direction; torque sensor; uniform impedance controller; user physiological response; virtual path; Anthropometry; Communication system control; Force measurement; Force sensors; Human robot interaction; Robot control; Robot kinematics; Robot sensing systems; Torque; Wrist;
Conference_Titel :
Haptic Audio visual Environments and Games, 2009. HAVE 2009. IEEE International Workshop on
Conference_Location :
Lecco
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-4217-1
Electronic_ISBN :
978-1-4244-4218-8
DOI :
10.1109/HAVE.2009.5356124