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Deep Learning for Model-Free Prediction of Thermal States of Robot Joint Motors

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

In this work, deep neural networks made up of multiple hidden Long Short-Term Memory (LSTM) and Feedforward layers are trained to predict the thermal behavior of the joint motors of robot manipulators. A model-free and scalable approach is adopted. It accommodates complexity and uncertainty challenges stemming from the derivation, identification, and validation of a large number of parameters of an approximation model that is hardly available. To this end, sensed joint torques are collected and processed to foresee the thermal behavior of joint motors. Promising prediction results of the machine learning based capture of the temperature dynamics of joint motors of a redundant robot with seven joints are presented.


Iteratively Learning Muscle Memory for Legged Robots to Master Adaptive and High Precision Locomotion

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

This paper presents a scalable and adaptive control framework for legged robots that integrates Iterative Learning Control (ILC) with a biologically inspired torque library (TL), analogous to muscle memory. The proposed method addresses key challenges in robotic locomotion, including accurate trajectory tracking under unmodeled dynamics and external disturbances. By leveraging the repetitive nature of periodic gaits and extending ILC to nonperiodic tasks, the framework enhances accuracy and generalization across diverse locomotion scenarios. The control architecture is data-enabled, combining a physics-based model derived from hybrid-system trajectory optimization with real-time learning to compensate for model uncertainties and external disturbances. A central contribution is the development of a generalized TL that stores learned control profiles and enables rapid adaptation to changes in speed, terrain, and gravitational conditions-eliminating the need for repeated learning and significantly reducing online computation. The approach is validated on the bipedal robot Cassie and the quadrupedal robot A1 through extensive simulations and hardware experiments. Results demonstrate that the proposed framework reduces joint tracking errors by up to 85% within a few seconds and enables reliable execution of both periodic and nonperiodic gaits, including slope traversal and terrain adaptation. Compared to state-of-the-art whole-body controllers, the learned skills eliminate the need for online computation during execution and achieve control update rates exceeding 30x those of existing methods. These findings highlight the effectiveness of integrating ILC with torque memory as a highly data-efficient and practical solution for legged locomotion in unstructured and dynamic environments.


Adaptive Negative Damping Control for User-Dependent Multi-Terrain Walking Assistance with a Hip Exoskeleton

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Adaptive Negative Damping Control for User-Dependent Multi-T errain Walking Assistance with a Hip Exoskeleton Giulia Ramella 1, 2, Auke Ijspeert 2, and Mohamed Bouri 1, 3 Abstract -- Hip exoskeletons are known for their versatility in assisting users across varied scenarios. However, current assistive strategies often lack the flexibility to accommodate for individual walking patterns and adapt to diverse locomotion environments. In this work, we present a novel control strategy that adapts the mechanical impedance of the human-exoskeleton system. We design the hip assistive torques as an adaptive virtual negative damping, which is able to inject energy into the system while allowing the users to remain in control and contribute voluntarily to the movements. Experiments with five healthy subjects demonstrate that our controller reduces the metabolic cost of walking compared to free walking (average reduction of 7 . Additionally, our method achieves minimal power losses from the exoskeleton across the entire gait cycle (less than 2% negative mechanical power out of the total power), ensuring synchronized action with the users' movements. Moreover, we use Bayesian Optimization to adapt the assistance strength and allow for seamless adaptation and transitions across multi-terrain environments. Our strategy achieves efficient power transmission under all conditions. Our approach demonstrates an individualized, adaptable, and straightforward controller for hip exoskeletons, advancing the development of viable, adaptive, and user-dependent control laws.


Rapid Online Learning of Hip Exoskeleton Assistance Preferences

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

-- Hip exoskeletons are increasing in popularity due to their effectiveness across various scenarios and their ability to adapt to different users. However, personalizing the assistance often requires lengthy tuning procedures and computationally intensive algorithms, and most existing methods do not incorporate user feedback. In this work, we propose a novel approach for rapidly learning users' preferences for hip exoskeleton assistance. We perform pairwise comparisons of distinct randomly generated assistive profiles, and collect participants preferences through active querying. Users' feedback is integrated into a preference-learning algorithm that updates its belief, learns a user-dependent reward function, and changes the assistive torque profiles accordingly. Results from eight healthy subjects display distinct preferred torque profiles, and users' choices remain consistent when compared to a perturbed profile. A comprehensive evaluation of users' preferences reveals a close relationship with individual walking strategies. The tested torque profiles do not disrupt kinematic joint synergies, and participants favor assistive torques that are synchronized with their movements, resulting in lower negative power from the device. This straightforward approach enables the rapid learning of users preferences and rewards, grounding future studies on reward-based human-exoskeleton interaction.


Computational Synthesis of Wearable Robot Mechanisms: Application to Hip-Joint Mechanisms

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Since wearable linkage mechanisms could control the moment transmission from actuator(s) to wearers, they can help ensure that even low-cost wearable systems provide advanced functionality tailored to users' needs. For example, if a hip mechanism transforms an input torque into a spatially-varying moment, a wearer can get effective assistance both in the sagittal and frontal planes during walking, even with an affordable single-actuator system. However, due to the combinatorial nature of the linkage mechanism design space, the topologies of such nonlinear-moment-generating mechanisms are challenging to determine, even with significant computational resources and numerical data. Furthermore, on-premise production development and interactive design are nearly impossible in conventional synthesis approaches. Here, we propose an innovative autonomous computational approach for synthesizing such wearable robot mechanisms, eliminating the need for exhaustive searches or numerous data sets. Our method transforms the synthesis problem into a gradient-based optimization problem with sophisticated objective and constraint functions while ensuring the desired degree of freedom, range of motion, and force transmission characteristics. To generate arbitrary mechanism topologies and dimensions, we employed a unified ground model. By applying the proposed method for the design of hip joint mechanisms, the topologies and dimensions of non-series-type hip joint mechanisms were obtained. Biomechanical simulations validated its multi-moment assistance capability, and its wearability was verified via prototype fabrication. The proposed design strategy can open a new way to design various wearable robot mechanisms, such as shoulders, knees, and ankles.


Real-Time Gait Phase and Task Estimation for Controlling a Powered Ankle Exoskeleton on Extremely Uneven Terrain

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Positive biomechanical outcomes have been reported with lower-limb exoskeletons in laboratory settings, but these devices have difficulty delivering appropriate assistance in synchrony with human gait as the task or rate of phase progression change in real-world environments. This paper presents a controller for an ankle exoskeleton that uses a data-driven kinematic model to continuously estimate the phase, phase rate, stride length, and ground incline states during locomotion, which enables the real-time adaptation of torque assistance to match human torques observed in a multi-activity database of 10 able-bodied subjects. We demonstrate in live experiments with a new cohort of 10 able-bodied participants that the controller yields phase estimates comparable to the state of the art, while also estimating task variables with similar accuracy to recent machine learning approaches. The implemented controller successfully adapts its assistance in response to changing phase and task variables, both during controlled treadmill trials (N=10, phase RMSE: 4.8 +- 2.4\%) and a real-world stress test with extremely uneven terrain (N=1, phase RMSE: 4.8 +- 2.7\%).