Manipulating Deformable Objects by Interleaving Prediction, Planning, and Control
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a framework for deformable object manipulation that interleaves planning and control, enabling complex manipulation tasks without relying on high-fidelity modeling or simulation.
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Abstract: We present a framework for deformable object manipulation that interleaves planning and control, enabling complex manipulation tasks without relying on high-fidelity modeling or simulation. The key question we address is when should we use planning and when should we use control to achieve the task? Planners are designed to find paths through complex configuration spaces, but for highly underactuated systems, such as deformable objects, achieving a specific configuration is very difficult even with high-fidelity models. Conversely, controllers can be designed to achieve specific configurations, but they can be trapped in undesirable local minima due to obstacles. Our approach consists of three components: (1) A global motion planner to generate gross motion of the deformable object; (2) A local controller for refinement of the configuration of the deformable object; and (3) A novel deadlock prediction algorithm to determine when to use planning versus control. By separating planning from control we are able to use different representations of the deformable object, reducing overall complexity and enabling efficient computation of motion. We provide a detailed proof of probabilistic completeness for our planner, which is valid despite the fact that our system is underactuated and we do not have a steering function. We then demonstrate that our framework is able to successfully perform several manipulation tasks with rope and cloth in simulation which cannot be performed using either our controller or planner alone. These experiments suggest that our planner can generate paths efficiently, taking under a second on average to find a feasible path in three out of four scenarios. We also show that our framework is effective on a 16 DoF physical robot, where reachability and dual-arm constraints make the planning more difficult.
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Citations
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153
Challenges and Outlook in Robotic Manipulation of Deformable Objects
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TL;DR: Deformable object manipulation (DOM) is an emerging research problem in robotics as discussed by the authors , which demands breakthroughs in almost all aspects of robotics: hardware design, sensing, (deformation) modeling, planning, and control.
Learning When to Trust a Dynamics Model for Planning in Reduced State Spaces
Dale McConachie,Thomas Power,Peter Mitrano,Dmitry Berenson +3 more
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Peter Mitrano,Dale McConachie,Dale McConachie,Dmitry Berenson +3 more
- 19 May 2021
TL;DR: In this paper, an approach that learns a model in an unconstrained setting and then learns a classifier to predict where that model is valid, given a limited dataset of rope-constraint interactions is presented.
35
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