Guri, Dominic
Hefty: A Modular Reconfigurable Robot for Advancing Robot Manipulation in Agriculture
Guri, Dominic, Lee, Moonyoung, Kroemer, Oliver, Kantor, George
This paper presents a modular, reconfigurable robot platform for robot manipulation in agriculture. While robot manipulation promises great advancements in automating challenging, complex tasks that are currently best left to humans, it is also an expensive capital investment for researchers and users because it demands significantly varying robot configurations depending on the task. Modular robots provide a way to obtain multiple configurations and reduce costs by enabling incremental acquisition of only the necessary modules. The robot we present, Hefty, is designed to be modular and reconfigurable. It is designed for both researchers and end-users as a means to improve technology transfer from research to real-world application. This paper provides a detailed design and integration process, outlining the critical design decisions that enable modularity in the mobility of the robot as well as its sensor payload, power systems, computing, and fixture mounting. We demonstrate the utility of the robot by presenting five configurations used in multiple real-world agricultural robotics applications.
Towards Autonomous Crop Monitoring: Inserting Sensors in Cluttered Environments
Lee, Moonyoung, Berger, Aaron, Guri, Dominic, Zhang, Kevin, Coffee, Lisa, Kantor, George, Kroemer, Oliver
Abstract-- We present a contact-based phenotyping robot platform that can autonomously insert nitrate sensors into cornstalks to proactively monitor macronutrient levels in crops. This task is challenging because inserting such sensors requires sub-centimeter precision in an environment which contains high levels of clutter, lighting variation, and occlusion. To address these challenges, we develop a robust perceptionaction pipeline to detect and grasp stalks, and create a custom robot gripper which mechanically aligns the sensor before inserting it into the stalk. Through experimental validation on 48 unique stalks in a cornfield in Iowa, we demonstrate our platform's capability of detecting a stalk with 94% success, grasping a stalk with 90% success, and inserting a sensor with 60% success. In addition to developing an autonomous phenotyping research platform, we share key challenges and insights obtained from deployment in the field. With the development of artificial intelligence in computer vision and robotics, the agricultural sector is poised to implement precision agriculture methods to enhance crop production efficiency and minimize environmental footprint [1]. Figure 1: Robot inserting sensors into cornstalks to monitor plant nitrate concentration in Curtiss Farm, Iowa.