automatic calibration
Autonomous Robotic Bone Micro-Milling System with Automatic Calibration and 3D Surface Fitting
Zhao, Enduo, Lin, Xiaofeng, Wang, Yifan, Harada, Kanako
Automating bone micro-milling using a robotic system presents challenges due to the uncertainties in both the external and internal features of bone tissue. For example, during a mouse cranial window creation, a circular path with a radius of 2 to 4 mm needs to be milled on the mouse skull using a microdrill. The uneven surface and non-uniform thickness of the mouse skull make it difficult to fully automate this process, requiring the system to possess advanced perceptual and adaptive capabilities. In this study, we propose an automatic calibration and 3D surface fitting method and integrate it into an autonomous robotic bone micro-milling system, enabling it to quickly, in real-time, and accurately perceive and adapt to the uneven surface and non-uniform thickness of the target without human assistance. Validation experiments on euthanized mice demonstrate that the improved system achieves a success rate of 85.7 % and an average milling time of 2.1 minutes, showing not only significant performance improvements over the previous system but also exceptional accuracy, speed, and stability compared to human operators.
- Asia > Japan > Honshū > Kantō > Tokyo Metropolis Prefecture > Tokyo (0.15)
- North America > Costa Rica > Heredia Province > Heredia (0.04)
- North America > United States (0.04)
- (3 more...)
Automatic Calibration for an Open-source Magnetic Tactile Sensor
Stockt, Lowiek Van den, Proesmans, Remko, wyffels, Francis
Tactile sensing can enable robots to perform complex, contact-rich tasks. Magnetic sensors offer accurate three-axis force measurements while using affordable materials. Calibrating such a sensor involves either manual data collection, or automated procedures with precise mounting of the sensor relative to an actuator. We present an open-source magnetic tactile sensor with an automatic, in situ, gripper-agnostic calibration method, after which the sensor is immediately ready for use. Our goal is to lower the barrier to entry for tactile sensing, fostering collaboration in robotics. Design files and readout code can be found at https://github.com/LowiekVDS/Open-source-Magnetic-Tactile-Sensor}{https://github.com/LowiekVDS/Open-source-Magnetic-Tactile-Sensor.
- North America > United States (0.05)
- Europe > Belgium > Flanders (0.05)
On automatic calibration of the SIRD epidemiological model for COVID-19 data in Poland
Błaszczyk, Piotr, Klimczak, Konrad, Mahdi, Adam, Oprocha, Piotr, Potorski, Paweł, Przybyłowicz, Paweł, Sobieraj, Michał
We propose a novel methodology for estimating the epidemiological parameters of a modified SIRD model (acronym of Susceptible, Infected, Recovered and Deceased individuals) and perform a short-term forecast of SARS-CoV-2 virus spread. We mainly focus on forecasting number of deceased. The procedure was tested on reported data for Poland. For some short-time intervals we performed numerical test investigating stability of parameter estimates in the proposed approach. Numerical experiments confirm the effectiveness of short-term forecasts (up to 2 weeks) and stability of the method. To improve their performance (i.e.
- Europe > United Kingdom > England > Oxfordshire > Oxford (0.14)
- Europe > Poland > Lesser Poland Province > Kraków (0.05)
- South America > Chile (0.04)
- (5 more...)
- Health & Medicine > Therapeutic Area > Infections and Infectious Diseases (1.00)
- Health & Medicine > Therapeutic Area > Immunology (1.00)
- Health & Medicine > Epidemiology (1.00)