Collision Detection for Human-Robot Interaction in an Industrial Setting using Force Myography and a Deep Learning Approach

Author(s):  
Mohammad Anvaripour ◽  
Mehrdad Saif
Author(s):  
Gopika Rajendran ◽  
Ojus Thomas Lee ◽  
Arya Gopi ◽  
Jais jose ◽  
Neha Gautham

With the evolution of computing technology in many application like human robot interaction, human computer interaction and health-care system, 3D human body models and their dynamic motions has gained popularity. Human performance accompanies human body shapes and their relative motions. Research on human activity recognition is structured around how the complex movement of a human body is identified and analyzed. Vision based action recognition from video is such kind of tasks where actions are inferred by observing the complete set of action sequence performed by human. Many techniques have been revised over the recent decades in order to develop a robust as well as effective framework for action recognition. In this survey, we summarize recent advances in human action recognition, namely the machine learning approach, deep learning approach and evaluation of these approaches.


2020 ◽  
Vol 7 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shamil Mamedov ◽  
Stanislav Mikhel

Recently, with the increased number of robots entering numerous manufacturing fields, a considerable wealth of literature has appeared on the theme of physical human-robot interaction using data from proprioceptive sensors (motor or/and load side encoders). Most of the studies have then the accurate dynamic model of a robot for granted. In practice, however, model identification and observer design proceeds collision detection. To the best of our knowledge, no previous study has systematically investigated each aspect underlying physical human-robot interaction and the relationship between those aspects. In this paper, we bridge this gap by first reviewing the literature on model identification, disturbance estimation and collision detection, and discussing the relationship between the three, then by examining the practical sides of model-based collision detection on a case study conducted on UR10e. We show that the model identification step is critical for accurate collision detection, while the choice of the observer should be mostly based on computation time and the simplicity and flexibility of tuning. It is hoped that this study can serve as a roadmap to equip industrial robots with basic physical human-robot interaction capabilities.


Author(s):  
Soo-Han Kang ◽  
Ji-Hyeong Han

AbstractRobot vision provides the most important information to robots so that they can read the context and interact with human partners successfully. Moreover, to allow humans recognize the robot’s visual understanding during human-robot interaction (HRI), the best way is for the robot to provide an explanation of its understanding in natural language. In this paper, we propose a new approach by which to interpret robot vision from an egocentric standpoint and generate descriptions to explain egocentric videos particularly for HRI. Because robot vision equals to egocentric video on the robot’s side, it contains as much egocentric view information as exocentric view information. Thus, we propose a new dataset, referred to as the global, action, and interaction (GAI) dataset, which consists of egocentric video clips and GAI descriptions in natural language to represent both egocentric and exocentric information. The encoder-decoder based deep learning model is trained based on the GAI dataset and its performance on description generation assessments is evaluated. We also conduct experiments in actual environments to verify whether the GAI dataset and the trained deep learning model can improve a robot vision system


2019 ◽  
Vol 4 (2) ◽  
pp. 740-746 ◽  
Author(s):  
Young Jin Heo ◽  
Dayeon Kim ◽  
Woongyong Lee ◽  
Hyoungkyun Kim ◽  
Jonghoon Park ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 14 (1) ◽  
pp. 22-30
Author(s):  
Dongkeon Park ◽  
◽  
Kyeong-Min Kang ◽  
Jin-Woo Bae ◽  
Ji-Hyeong Han

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