Beyond Anthropomorphism: Enhancing Grasping and Eliminating a Degree of Freedom by Fusing the Abduction of Digits Four and Five

Fritsch, Simon, Achenbach, Liam, Bianco, Riccardo, Irmiger, Nicola, Marti, Gawain, Visca, Samuel, Yang, Chenyu, Liconti, Davide, Cangan, Barnabas Gavin, Malate, Robert Jomar, Hinchet, Ronan J., Katzschmann, Robert K.

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence 

Abstract-- This paper presents the SABD hand, a 16-degree-of-freedom (DoF) robotic hand that departs from purely anthropomorphic designs to achieve an expanded grasp envelope, enable manipulation poses beyond human capability, and reduce the required number of actuators. This is achieved by combining the adduction/abduction (Add/Abd) joint of digits four and five into a single joint with a large range of motion. The combined joint increases the workspace of the digits by 400% and reduces the required DoFs while retaining dexterity. Experimental results demonstrate that the combined Add/Abd joint enables the hand to grasp objects with a side distance of up to 200 mm. Reinforcement learning-based investigations show that the design enables grasping policies that are effective not only for handling larger objects but also for achieving enhanced grasp stability. In teleoperated trials, the hand successfully performed 86% of attempted grasps on suitable YCB objects, including challenging non-anthropomorphic configurations. These findings validate the design's ability to enhance grasp stability, flexibility, and dexterous manipulation without added complexity, making it well-suited for a wide range of applications. A. Motivation Robust grasping for robotic manipulation is one of the key issues preventing the usage of robots in many applications [1]. The difficulty herein can be attributed to both software [2] and hardware challenges [3]. No robotic manipulator has been able to fully match the dexterity, power-to-weight ratio, and exteroception of the human hand [4]. Commercially available solutions, such as robotic grippers [5], the Shadow Robotic Hand [6], the Allegro Hand [7] and the Leap Hand [8], tend to be expensive or overly limited in their capabilities.