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Collaborating Authors

 Sedal, Audrey


Acoustic tactile sensing for mobile robot wheels

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Tactile sensing in mobile robots remains under-explored, mainly due to challenges related to sensor integration and the complexities of distributed sensing. In this work, we present a tactile sensing architecture for mobile robots based on wheel-mounted acoustic waveguides. Our sensor architecture enables tactile sensing along the entire circumference of a wheel with a single active component: an off-the-shelf acoustic rangefinder. We present findings showing that our sensor, mounted on the wheel of a mobile robot, is capable of discriminating between different terrains, detecting and classifying obstacles with different geometries, and performing collision detection via contact localization. We also present a comparison between our sensor and sensors traditionally used in mobile robots, and point to the potential for sensor fusion approaches that leverage the unique capabilities of our tactile sensing architecture. Our findings demonstrate that autonomous mobile robots can further leverage our sensor architecture for diverse mapping tasks requiring knowledge of terrain material, surface topology, and underlying structure.


Lagrangian Properties and Control of Soft Robots Modeled with Discrete Cosserat Rods

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

The characteristic ``in-plane" bending associated with soft robots' deformation make them preferred over rigid robots in sophisticated manipulation and movement tasks. Executing such motion strategies to precision in soft deformable robots and structures is however fraught with modeling and control challenges given their infinite degrees-of-freedom. Imposing \textit{piecewise constant strains} (PCS) across (discretized) Cosserat microsolids on the continuum material however, their dynamics become amenable to tractable mathematical analysis. While this PCS model handles the characteristic difficult-to-model ``in-plane" bending well, its Lagrangian properties are not exploited for control in literature neither is there a rigorous study on the dynamic performance of multisection deformable materials for ``in-plane" bending that guarantees steady-state convergence. In this sentiment, we first establish the PCS model's structural Lagrangian properties. Second, we exploit these for control on various strain goal states. Third, we benchmark our hypotheses against an Octopus-inspired robot arm under different constant tip loads. These induce non-constant ``in-plane" deformation and we regulate strain states throughout the continuum in these configurations. Our numerical results establish convergence to desired equilibrium throughout the continuum in all of our tests. Within the bounds here set, we conjecture that our methods can find wide adoption in the control of cable- and fluid-driven multisection soft robotic arms; and may be extensible to the (learning-based) control of deformable agents employed in simulated, mixed, or augmented reality.