Goto

Collaborating Authors

 measurement level


Single-Pixel Tactile Skin via Compressive Sampling

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Development of large-area, high-speed electronic skins is a grand challenge for robotics, prosthetics, and human-machine interfaces, but is fundamentally limited by wiring complexity and data bottlenecks. Here, we introduce Single-Pixel Tactile Skin (SPTS), a paradigm that uses compressive sampling to reconstruct rich tactile information from an entire sensor array via a single output channel. This is achieved through a direct circuit-level implementation where each sensing element, equipped with a miniature microcontroller, contributes a dynamically weighted analog signal to a global sum, performing distributed compressed sensing in hardware. Our flexible, daisy-chainable design simplifies wiring to a few input lines and one output, and significantly reduces measurement requirements compared to raster scanning methods. We demonstrate the system's performance by achieving object classification at an effective 3500 FPS and by capturing transient dynamics, resolving an 8 ms projectile impact into 23 frames. A key feature is the support for adaptive reconstruction, where sensing fidelity scales with measurement time. This allows for rapid contact localization using as little as 7% of total data, followed by progressive refinement to a high-fidelity image - a capability critical for responsive robotic systems. This work offers an efficient pathway towards large-scale tactile intelligence for robotics and human-machine interfaces.


Adaptive Subsampling and Learned Model Improve Spatiotemporal Resolution of Tactile Skin

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

High-speed tactile arrays are essential for real-time robotic control in unstructured environments, but high pixel counts limit readout rates of most large tactile arrays to below 100Hz. We introduce ACTS - adaptive compressive tactile subsampling - a method that efficiently samples tactile matrices and reconstructs interactions using sparse recovery and a learned tactile dictionary. Tested on a 1024-pixel sensor array (32x32), ACTS increased frame rates by 18X compared to raster scanning, with minimal error. For the first time in large-area tactile skin, we demonstrate rapid object classification within 20ms of contact, high-speed projectile detection, ricochet angle estimation, and deformation tracking through enhanced spatiotemporal resolution. Our method can be implemented in firmware, upgrading existing low-cost, flexible, and robust tactile arrays into high-resolution systems for large-area spatiotemporal touch sensing.