DocumentCode
2379375
Title
The role of small redundant actuators in precise manipulation
Author
Balasubramanian, Ravi ; Matsuoka, Yoky
Author_Institution
Dept. of Comput. Sci. & Eng., Univ. of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA
fYear
2009
fDate
12-17 May 2009
Firstpage
4409
Lastpage
4415
Abstract
With the goal of developing human-like dextrous manipulation, we investigate how the central nervous system uses the redundant control space of the human hand to perform tasks with force-stiffness requirements. Specifically, while the human hand is actuated by several muscles with varying mechanical advantage (called the moment arm), it is unclear how each muscle is used. Using the anatomically correct testbed (ACT) robotic hand to compute the control solution space and human-subject experiments with surface electromyography to measure biological control strategy, we identified that there is significant redundancy in the control spaces of both muscles with large moment arms and muscles with small moment arms. However, the central nervous system was selective about the solution for muscles with large moment arms, while it chose to span large regions of the available control space for muscles with small moment arms. Furthermore, the biological solution used low-moment-arm muscles at relatively high actuation levels. We summarize by making inferences on why the central nervous system chooses such a strategy and how this can help robotic manipulation.
Keywords
dexterous manipulators; electromyography; redundant manipulators; anatomically correct testbed robotic hand; biological control strategy; central nervous system; human-like dextrous manipulation; moment arm; redundant control space; robotic manipulation; small redundant actuators; surface electromyography; Actuators; Arm; Biological control systems; Central nervous system; Centralized control; Control systems; Force control; Humans; Muscles; Orbital robotics;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Robotics and Automation, 2009. ICRA '09. IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location
Kobe
ISSN
1050-4729
Print_ISBN
978-1-4244-2788-8
Electronic_ISBN
1050-4729
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ROBOT.2009.5152331
Filename
5152331
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