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CREATIVE LEARNING FOR INTELLIGENT ROBOTSLIAO, XIAOQUN (SHERRY) 03 April 2006 (has links)
No description available.
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Linear Robust Control in Indirect Deformable Object ManipulationKinio, Steven C. January 2013 (has links)
<p>Robotic platforms have several characteristics such as speed and precision that make them enticing for use in medical procedures. Companies such as Intuitive Medical and Titan Medical have taken advantage of these features to introduce surgical robots for minimally invasive procedures. Such robots aim to reduce procedure and patient recovery times. Current technology requires platforms to be master-slave manipulators controlled by a surgeon, effectively converting the robot into an expensive surgical tool. Research into the interaction between robotic platforms and deformable objects such as human tissue is necessary in the development of autonomous and semi-autonomous surgical systems. This thesis investigates a class of robust linear controllers based on a worst case performance measure known as the $H_{\infty}$ norm, for the purpose of performing so called Indirect Deformable Object Manipulation (IDOM). This task allows positional regulation of regions of interest in a deformable object without directly interacting with them, enabling tasks such as stabilization of tumors during biopsies or automatic suturing. A complete approach to generating linear $H_{\infty}$ based controllers is presented, from derivation of a plant model to the actual synthesis of the controller. The introduction of model uncertainty requires $\mu$ synthesis techniques, which extend $H_{\infty}$ designs to produce highly robust controller solutions. In addition to $H_{\infty}$ and $\mu$ synthesis designs, the thesis presents an approach to design an optimal PID controller with gains that minimize the $H_{\infty}$ norm of a weighted plant. The three control approaches are simulated performing set point regulation in $\text{MATLAB}^{TM}$'s $simulink$. Simulations included disturbance inputs and noises to test stability and robustness of the approaches. $H_{\infty}$ controllers had the best robust performance of the controllers simulated, although all controllers simulated were stable. The $H_{\infty}$ and PID controllers were validated in an experimental setting, with experiments performed on two different deformable synthetic materials. It was found that $H_{\infty}$ techniques were highly robust and provided good tracking performance for a material that behaved in a relatively elastic manner, but failed to track well when applied to a highly nonlinear rubber compound. PID based control was outperformed by $H_{\infty}$ control in experiments performed on the elastic material, but proved to be superior when faced with the nonlinear material. These experimental findings are discussed and a linear $H_{\infty}$ control design approach is proposed.</p> / Master of Applied Science (MASc)
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Adaptive neural architectures for intuitive robot controlMelidis, Christos January 2017 (has links)
This thesis puts forward a novel way of control for robotic morphologies. Taking inspiration from Behaviour Based robotics and self-organisation principles, we present an interfacing mechanism, capable of adapting both to the user and the robot, while enabling a paradigm of intuitive control for the user. A transparent mechanism is presented, allowing for a seamless integration of control signals and robot behaviours. Instead of the user adapting to the interface and control paradigm, the proposed architecture allows the user to shape the control motifs in their way of preference, moving away from the cases where the user has to read and understand operation manuals or has to learn to operate a specific device. The seminal idea behind the work presented is the coupling of intuitive human behaviours with the dynamics of a machine in order to control and direct the machine dynamics. Starting from a tabula rasa basis, the architectures presented are able to identify control patterns (behaviours) for any given robotic morphology and successfully merge them with control signals from the user, regardless of the input device used. We provide a deep insight in the advantages of behaviour coupling, investigating the proposed system in detail, providing evidence for and quantifying emergent properties of the models proposed. The structural components of the interface are presented and assessed both individually and as a whole, as are inherent properties of the architectures. The proposed system is examined and tested both in vitro and in vivo, and is shown to work even in cases of complicated environments, as well as, complicated robotic morphologies. As a whole, this paradigm of control is found to highlight the potential for a change in the paradigm of robotic control, and a new level in the taxonomy of human in the loop systems.
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Identification et commande en ligne des robots avec utilisation de différentiateurs algébriques / Online identification and control of robots using algebraic differentiatorsGuo, Qi 17 December 2015 (has links)
Cette thèse traite de l'identification des paramètres dynamiques des robots, en s'appuyant sur les méthodes d'identification en robotique, qui utilisent le modèle dynamique inverse, ou le modèle de puissance, ou le modèle d'énergie du robot. Ce travail revisite le modèle d'énergie en exploitant le caractère intégral des fonctions modulatrices appliquées au modèle de puissance du robot. En outre, les procédures d'intégration sont analysées dans le domaine fréquentiel, et certains groupes de fonctions modulatrices sont sélectionnés afin d'offrir un bon comportement de filtre passe-bas. Ensuite, l'introduction d'un différentiateur algèbrique récemment développé est proposé, nommé différentiateurs de Jacobi. L'analyse est effectuée dans le domaine temporel, et dans le domaine fréquenciel, ce qui met en évidence la propriété de filtrage passe bande et permet de sélectionner les paramètres des différentiateurs. Puis, ces différentiateurs sont appliqués avec succès à l'identification de robot, ce qui prouve leur bonne performance. Les comparaisons entre les différents modèles d'identification, les différenciateurs, les techniques des moindres carrés sont présentées et des conclusions sont tirées dans le domaine de l'identification de robot. / This thesis discusses the identification issues of the robot dynamic parameters. Starting with the well-known inverse dynamic identification model, power and energy identification models for robots, it extends the identification model from an energy point of view, by integrating modulating functions with robot power model. This new identification model avoids the computation of acceleration data. As well, the integration procedures are analyzed in frequency domain so that certain groups of modulating functions are selected in order to offer a good low-pass filtering property. Then, a recently developed high order algebraic differentiator is proposed and studied, named Jacobi differentiators. The analyses are done in both the time domain and in the frequency domain, which gives a clear clue about the differentiator filtering property and about how to select the differentiator parameters. Comparisons among different identification models, differentiators, least square techniques are presented and conclusions are drawn in the robot identification issues.
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Coordinated, Multi-Arm Manipulation with Soft RobotsKraus, Dustan Paul 01 October 2018 (has links)
Soft lightweight robots provide an inherently safe solution to using robots in unmodeled environments by maintaining safety without increasing cost through expensive sensors. Unfortunately, many practical problems still need to be addressed before soft robots can become useful in real world tasks. Unlike traditional robots, soft robot geometry is not constant but can change with deflation and reinflation. Small errors in a robot's kinematic model can result in large errors in pose estimation of the end effector. This error, coupled with the inherent compliance of soft robots and the difficulty of soft robot joint angle sensing, makes it very challenging to accurately control the end effector of a soft robot in task space. However, this inherent compliance means that soft robots lend themselves nicely to coordinated multi-arm manipulation tasks, as deviations in end effector pose do not result in large force buildup in the arms or in the object being manipulated. Coordinated, multi-arm manipulation with soft robots is the focus of this thesis. We first developed two tools enabling multi-arm manipulation with soft robots: (1) a hybrid servoing control scheme for task space control of soft robot arms, and (2) a general base placement optimization for the robot arms in a multi-arm manipulation task. Using these tools, we then developed and implemented a simple multi-arm control scheme. The hybrid servoing control scheme combines inverse kinematics, joint angle control, and task space servoing in order to reduce end effector pose error. We implemented this control scheme on two soft robots and demonstrated its effectiveness in task space control. Having developed a task space controller for soft robots, we then approached the problem of multi-arm manipulation. The placement of each arm for a multi-arm task is non-trivial. We developed an evolutionary optimization that finds the optimal arm base location for any number of user-defined arms in a user-defined task or workspace. We demonstrated the utility of this optimization in simulation, and then used it to determine the arm base locations for two arms in two real world coordinated multi-arm manipulation tasks. Finally, we developed a simple multi-arm control scheme for soft robots and demonstrated its effectiveness using one soft robot arm, and one rigid robot with low-impedance torque control. We placed each arm base in the pose determined by the base placement optimization, and then used the hybrid servoing controller in our multi-arm control scheme to manipulate an object through two desired trajectories.
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Development of Electronics, Software, and Graphical User Control Interface for a Wall-Climbing RobotTesillo, Lynda Beatriz 01 June 2015 (has links)
The objective for this project is to investigate various electrical and software means of control to support and advance the development of a novel vacuum adhesion system for a wall-climbing robot. The design and implementation of custom electronics and a wirelessly controlled real-time software system used to define and support the functionalities of these electronics is discussed. The testing and evaluation of the overall system performance and the performance of the several different subsystems developed, while working both individually and cooperatively within the system, is also demonstrated.
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MODELING AND CONTROL OF AN IMPROVED HYBRID PNEUMATIC-ELECTRIC ACTUATORXue, Mantian 24 September 2014 (has links)
Combining the advantages from electric motor and the pneumatic actuator, the hybrid pneumatic-electric actuator is expected to be safe, low-cost, clean, high power to weight ratio, and to provide precise position control. In this thesis, the modeling and control of an improved hybrid pneumatic-electric actuator prototype is presented. The actuator’s main components consist of a low-friction pneumatic cylinder, two on/off solenoid valves, and a small DC motor. The cylinder and motor are connected to a common output shaft using gears. The shaft rotates a single-link robot arm. Its position is measured by an incremental encoder. The prototype was improved by incorporating faster switching valves, flow controls, a faster valve drive circuit, a high resolution encoder rather than the existing linear potentiometer, more accurate pressure sensors and stronger gears. A system dynamic model without the valve dynamic was developed identified and validated using open-loop experiments. The valve models for a discrete input and PWM input were then developed and validated separately. The use of bipolynomial function and artificial neural network fitting methods for modeling the valve mass flow rates were compared. The combined system model with valve dynamics was validated experimentally. Two model-based nonlinear position controllers, using the backstepping and discrete-valued model predictive control (DVMPC) methods, were designed, simulated and extensively tested. Testing was done with the actuator operating using the cylinder alone, the motor alone and in hybrid mode using the cylinder and motor together. Operating in the hybrid mode reduced the root-mean-square error (RMSE) up to 80%. A stability analysis for the backstepping control including the valve modeling error, friction model error, and electric motor torque modeling error was performed. Compensation terms were designed to improve the performance for the two controllers. Additional stability analyses were performed for backstepping controller with a feedback term and the DVMPC with motor control. A payload estimation algorithm was proposed and shown to enhance the robustness of the DVMPC operating in vertical configuration. Simulations and experiments demonstrated that the model-based controllers performed well for both vertical and horizontal configurations. Regarding robustness to payload mismatch, if the payload was within the load capacity of the hybrid actuator, the model-based controllers were both insensitive to the payload variations in horizontal configuration. The backstepping controller was also robust to the payload variations in the vertical configuration. In experiments, the backstepping control in hybrid actuation mode produced a RMSE of 0.0066 radian for a 2 Hz sine wave desired position trajectory with a 0.3 radian amplitude. With DVMPC, this value decreased to 0.0045 radian. These tracking errors were shown to be 30 to 50% less than those produced by a modified linear position plus velocity plus acceleration controller. / Master of Applied Science (MASc)
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Implementing telerobotics in industrial assemblingTébar, Erica January 2024 (has links)
Remote control of automation systems is consistently undeniably as a crucial aspect of their development, as it eliminates the need to travel unnecessary distances to operate them. Therefore, a framework is proposed not only for controlling an industrial robotic system but also for monitoring its behaviour and environment to ensure efficient and secure control over it. This project is carried out within the field of robotics, although its application can extend to other domains such as automotive, among others. In the following project, a system based on industry 5.0 and Cyber Physical Systems is developed and implemented capable of storing and recovering the data collected from a robotic station while allowing its control through a User Interface. Giving the operator the opportunity to control an industrial assembly process remotely in a reliable and safe way.
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Interactions in multi-robot systemsDiaz-Mercado, Yancy J. 27 May 2016 (has links)
The objective of this research is to develop a framework for multi-robot coordination and control with emphasis on human-swarm and inter-agent interactions. We focus on two problems: in the first we address how to enable a single human operator to externally influence large teams of robots. By directly imposing density functions on the environment, the user is able to abstract away the size of the swarm and manipulate it as a whole, e.g., to achieve specified geometric configurations, or to maneuver it around. In order to pursue this approach, contributions are made to the problem of coverage of time-varying density functions. In the second problem, we address the characterization of inter-agent interactions and enforcement of desired interaction patterns in a provably safe (i.e., collision free) manner, e.g., for achieving rich motion patterns in a shared space, or for mixing of sensor information. We use elements of the braid group, which allows us to symbolically characterize classes of interaction patterns. We further construct a new specification language that allows us to provide rich, temporally-layered specifications to the multi-robot mixing framework, and present algorithms that significantly reduce the search space of specification-satisfying symbols with exactness guarantees. We also synthesize provably safe controllers that generate and track trajectories to satisfy these symbolic inputs. These controllers allow us to find bounds on the amount of safe interactions that can be achieved in a given bounded domain.
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Wireless mosaic eyes based robot path planning and control : autonomous robot navigation using environment intelligence with distributed vision sensorsCheng, Yongqiang January 2010 (has links)
As an attempt to steer away from developing an autonomous robot with complex centralised intelligence, this thesis proposes an intelligent environment infrastructure where intelligences are distributed in the environment through collaborative vision sensors mounted in a physical architecture, forming a wireless sensor network, to enable the navigation of unintelligent robots within that physical architecture. The aim is to avoid the bottleneck of centralised robot intelligence that hinders the application and exploitation of autonomous robot. A bio-mimetic snake algorithm is proposed to coordinate the distributed vision sensors for the generation of a collision free Reference-snake (R-snake) path during the path planning process. By following the R-snake path, a novel Accompanied snake (A-snake) method that complies with the robot's nonholonomic constraints for trajectory generation and motion control is introduced to generate real time robot motion commands to navigate the robot from its current position to the target position. A rolling window optimisation mechanism subject to control input saturation constraints is carried out for time-optimal control along the A-snake. A comprehensive simulation software and a practical distributed intelligent environment with vision sensors mounted on a building ceiling are developed. All the algorithms proposed in this thesis are first verified by the simulation and then implemented in the practical intelligent environment. A model car with less on-board intelligence is successfully controlled by the distributed vision sensors and demonstrated superior mobility.
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