Adaptive Aid on Targeted Robot Manipulator Movements in Tele-Assistance

The teleoperation of robot manipulators over the internet suffers from variable delays in the communications. Here we address a tele-assistance scenario, where a remote operator assists a disabled or elderly user on daily life tasks. Our behavioral approach uses local environment information from ro...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Stoelen Martin F., Tejada Virginia F., Jardón Alberto, Bonsignorio Fabio, Balaguer Carlos
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: De Gruyter 2016-08-01
Series:Paladyn: Journal of Behavioral Robotics
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1515/pjbr-2016-0002
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spelling doaj-f292351f33bd482ba7bee0e78a7df8fd2021-10-02T17:46:49ZengDe GruyterPaladyn: Journal of Behavioral Robotics2081-48362016-08-017110.1515/pjbr-2016-0002pjbr-2016-0002Adaptive Aid on Targeted Robot Manipulator Movements in Tele-AssistanceStoelen Martin F.0Tejada Virginia F.1Jardón Alberto2Bonsignorio Fabio3Balaguer Carlos4Centre for Robotics and Neural Systems (CRNS), Plymouth University, UKRoboticsLab, Department of Systems Engineering and Automation, Universidad Carlos III of MadridRoboticsLab, Department of Systems Engineering and Automation, Universidad Carlos III of MadridThe BioRobotics Institute, Scuola Superiore Sant’Anna, Pisa and CEO/founder of Heron Robots, Genoa, ItalyRoboticsLab, Department of Systems Engineering and Automation, Universidad Carlos III of MadridThe teleoperation of robot manipulators over the internet suffers from variable delays in the communications. Here we address a tele-assistance scenario, where a remote operator assists a disabled or elderly user on daily life tasks. Our behavioral approach uses local environment information from robot sensing to help enable faster execution for a given movement tolerance. This is achieved through a controller that automatically slows the operator down before having collisions, using a set of distributed proximity sensors. The controller is made to gradually increase the assistance in situations similar to those where ollisions have occurred in the past, thus adapting to the given operator, robot and task-set. Two controlled virtual experiments for tele-assistance with a 5 DOF manipulator were performed, with 300 ms and 600 ms mean variable round-trip delays. The results showed significant improvements in the median times of 12.6% and 16.5%, respectively. Improvements in the subjective workload were also seen with the controller. A first implementation on a physical robot manipulator is described.https://doi.org/10.1515/pjbr-2016-0002teleoperation assistive robotics time-delays haptics shared control neural network proximity sensing distributed adaptive control (dac)
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Stoelen Martin F.
Tejada Virginia F.
Jardón Alberto
Bonsignorio Fabio
Balaguer Carlos
spellingShingle Stoelen Martin F.
Tejada Virginia F.
Jardón Alberto
Bonsignorio Fabio
Balaguer Carlos
Adaptive Aid on Targeted Robot Manipulator Movements in Tele-Assistance
Paladyn: Journal of Behavioral Robotics
teleoperation
assistive robotics
time-delays
haptics
shared control
neural network
proximity sensing
distributed adaptive control (dac)
author_facet Stoelen Martin F.
Tejada Virginia F.
Jardón Alberto
Bonsignorio Fabio
Balaguer Carlos
author_sort Stoelen Martin F.
title Adaptive Aid on Targeted Robot Manipulator Movements in Tele-Assistance
title_short Adaptive Aid on Targeted Robot Manipulator Movements in Tele-Assistance
title_full Adaptive Aid on Targeted Robot Manipulator Movements in Tele-Assistance
title_fullStr Adaptive Aid on Targeted Robot Manipulator Movements in Tele-Assistance
title_full_unstemmed Adaptive Aid on Targeted Robot Manipulator Movements in Tele-Assistance
title_sort adaptive aid on targeted robot manipulator movements in tele-assistance
publisher De Gruyter
series Paladyn: Journal of Behavioral Robotics
issn 2081-4836
publishDate 2016-08-01
description The teleoperation of robot manipulators over the internet suffers from variable delays in the communications. Here we address a tele-assistance scenario, where a remote operator assists a disabled or elderly user on daily life tasks. Our behavioral approach uses local environment information from robot sensing to help enable faster execution for a given movement tolerance. This is achieved through a controller that automatically slows the operator down before having collisions, using a set of distributed proximity sensors. The controller is made to gradually increase the assistance in situations similar to those where ollisions have occurred in the past, thus adapting to the given operator, robot and task-set. Two controlled virtual experiments for tele-assistance with a 5 DOF manipulator were performed, with 300 ms and 600 ms mean variable round-trip delays. The results showed significant improvements in the median times of 12.6% and 16.5%, respectively. Improvements in the subjective workload were also seen with the controller. A first implementation on a physical robot manipulator is described.
topic teleoperation
assistive robotics
time-delays
haptics
shared control
neural network
proximity sensing
distributed adaptive control (dac)
url https://doi.org/10.1515/pjbr-2016-0002
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AT tejadavirginiaf adaptiveaidontargetedrobotmanipulatormovementsinteleassistance
AT jardonalberto adaptiveaidontargetedrobotmanipulatormovementsinteleassistance
AT bonsignoriofabio adaptiveaidontargetedrobotmanipulatormovementsinteleassistance
AT balaguercarlos adaptiveaidontargetedrobotmanipulatormovementsinteleassistance
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