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Force and Motion Based Methods for Planar Human-Robot Co-manipulation of Extended Objects

As robots become more common operating in close proximity to people, new opportunities arise for physical human-robot interaction, such as co-manipulation of extended objects. Co-manipulation involves physical interaction between two partners where an object held by both is manipulated in tandem. There is a dearth of viable high degree-of-freedom co-manipulation controllers, especially for extended objects, as well as a lack of information about how human-human teams perform in high degree-of-freedom tasks. One method for creating co-manipulation controllers is to pattern them off of human data. This thesis uses this technique by exploring a previously completed experimental study. The study involved human-human dyads in leader-follower format performing co-manipulation tasks with an extended object in 6 degrees of freedom. Two important tasks performed in this experiment were lateral translation and planar rotation tasks. This thesis focuses on these two tasks because they represent planar motion. Most previous control methods are for 1 or 2 degrees-of-freedom. The study provided information about how human-human dyads perform planar tasks. Most notably, planar tasks generally adhere to minimum-jerk trajectories, and do not minimize interaction forces between users. The study also helped solve the translation versus rotation problem. From the experimental data, torque patterns were discovered at the beginning of the trial that defined intent to translate or rotate. From these patterns, a new method of planar co-manipulation control was developed, called Extended Variable Impedance Control. This is a novel 3 degree-of-freedom method that is applicable to a variety of planar co-manipulation scenarios. Additionally, the data was fed through a Recursive Neural Network. The network takes in a series of motion data and predicts the next step in the series. The predicted data was used as an intent estimate in another novel 3 degree of freedom method called Neural Network Prediction Control. This method is capable of generalizing to 6 degrees of freedom, but is limited in this thesis for comparison with the other method. An experiment, involving 16 participants, was developed to test the capabilities of both controllers for planar tasks. A dual manipulator robot with an omnidirectional base was used in the experiment. The results from the study show that both the Neural Network Prediction Control and Extended Variable Impedance Control controllers performed comparably to blindfolded human-human dyads. A survey given to participants informed us they preferred to use the Extended Variable Impedance Control. These two unique controllers are the major results of this work.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:BGMYU2/oai:scholarsarchive.byu.edu:etd-7767
Date01 April 2018
CreatorsMielke, Erich Allen
PublisherBYU ScholarsArchive
Source SetsBrigham Young University
Detected LanguageEnglish
Typetext
Formatapplication/pdf
SourceAll Theses and Dissertations
Rightshttp://lib.byu.edu/about/copyright/

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