DocumentCode
165313
Title
Distributed sensing, learning and control in an assistive manipulator
Author
Stoelen, Martin F. ; Tejada, Virginia F. ; Jardon Huete, Alberto ; Bonsignorio, Fabio ; Balaguer, C.
Author_Institution
Dept. of Syst. Eng. & Autom., Univ. Carlos III de Madrid (UC3M), Leganés, Spain
fYear
2014
fDate
8-10 Oct. 2014
Firstpage
1348
Lastpage
1353
Abstract
One of the grand challenges for the robotics community is to create robots that operate robustly in realworld scenarios. Most current robots are limited to factories, laboratories or similar controlled settings. This contrasts with the seeming ease with which insects, animals and humans handle uncertainty, dynamic events and complexity. Assistive robots are for example being envisioned for aiding elderly and disabled persons in their homes. A key skill for these robots will be to operate in, and physically manipulate, daily life environments. However, it is unclear how to achieve this while complying with the safety and reliability requirements of such devices. Distributed Adaptive Control (DAC) is an example of a biologically inspired architecture for control and adaptation, where the lowest unit is the reflex. We here explore recent work on extending this idea to shared control of assistive robot manipulators. That is, where sensing, learning and control are distributed throughout the system, and across both user and robot. We show that such a distributed approach can reduce the need for central information processing, exact internal representations, and “global” approaches to learning in the robot. The reduced algorithmic complexity can help increase the robustness and usability of the system on real-world tasks.
Keywords
adaptive control; assisted living; geriatrics; handicapped aids; manipulators; robust control; DAC; algorithmic complexity; assistive manipulator; assistive robot manipulators; central information processing; disabled persons; distributed adaptive control; distributed sensing; dynamic events; elderly; real-world tasks; reliability requirements; robotics community; robustness; safety; usability; Collision avoidance; Manipulators; Mobile robots; Random variables; Robot sensing systems;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Intelligent Control (ISIC), 2014 IEEE International Symposium on
Conference_Location
Juan Les Pins
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ISIC.2014.6967619
Filename
6967619
Link To Document