Design of singularity-robust and task-priority primitive controllers for cooperative manipulation using dual quaternion representation

Author(s):  
Cristiana Miranda de Farias ◽  
Yuri Goncalves Rocha ◽  
Luis Felipe Cruz Figueredo ◽  
Mariana Costa Bernardes
2019 ◽  
Vol 4 (27) ◽  
pp. eaau9757 ◽  
Author(s):  
F. Cini ◽  
V. Ortenzi ◽  
P. Corke ◽  
M. Controzzi

The human hand is capable of performing countless grasps and gestures that are the basis for social activities. However, which grasps contribute the most to the manipulation skills needed during collaborative tasks, and thus which grasps should be included in a robot companion, is still an open issue. Here, we investigated grasp choice and hand placement on objects during a handover when subsequent tasks are performed by the receiver and when in-hand and bimanual manipulation are not allowed. Our findings suggest that, in this scenario, human passers favor precision grasps during such handovers. Passers also tend to grasp the purposive part of objects and leave “handles” unobstructed to the receivers. Intuitively, this choice allows receivers to comfortably perform subsequent tasks with the objects. In practice, many factors contribute to a choice of grasp, e.g., object and task constraints. However, not all of these factors have had enough emphasis in the implementation of grasping by robots, particularly the constraints introduced by a task, which are critical to the success of a handover. Successful robotic grasping is important if robots are to help humans with tasks. We believe that the results of this work can benefit the wider robotics community, with applications ranging from industrial cooperative manipulation to household collaborative manipulation.


2022 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lloyd Strohl ◽  
Javier Doll ◽  
Matthew Fritz ◽  
Andrew W. Berning ◽  
Stephanie White ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Katherine L. Forsyth ◽  
Hunter J. Hawthorne ◽  
Nibras El-Sherif ◽  
Skylar M. Pagel ◽  
Renaldo C. Blocker

Interruptions in the emergency department (ED) have been studied across multiple clinical roles, with little investigation into how residents experience interruptions. Therefore this pilot study aimed to characterize interruptions experienced by emergency medicine (EM) residents at various post-graduate year (PGY) levels. Observers shadowed ED residents across entire shifts and logged interruptions that affected clinicians into the Workflow Interruption Tool (WIT). Interruption characteristics captured included duration, nature, location, and task priority. Chi-square analysis identified a significant association between interruption type and the interruption priority, p < 0.001. Residents at varying PGY-levels experienced significantly different amounts of interruptions, p=0.013. Observing resident interruptions across the entirety of their shifts identified that as EM residents gain more experience, they are interrupted more often while working in the ED.


Author(s):  
Anurag Purwar ◽  
Zhe Jin ◽  
Q. J. Ge

In this paper, we study the problem of rational motion interpolation under kinematic constraints of spatial SS open chains. The objective is to synthesize a smooth rational motion that interpolates a given set of end effector positions and satisfies the kinematic constraints imposed by spatial SS open chains. The kinematic constraints under consideration define a constraint manifold representing all the positions available to the end effector. By choosing dual quaternion representation for the displacement of the end effector, the problem is reduced to designing a smooth curve in the space of dual quaternions that is constrained to lie inside the constraint manifold of the spatial SS open chain. An iterative numerical algorithm is presented that solves this problem effectively. The results presented in this paper are extension of our previous work on the synthesis of piecewise rational planar and spherical motions for open and closed chains under kinematic constraints.


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