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Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, IEEE Transactions on Robotics, 5(34), p. 1170-1182, 2018

DOI: 10.1109/tro.2018.2830405

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Force, Impedance and Trajectory Learning for Contact Tooling and Haptic Identification

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This paper is available in a repository.

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Abstract

Humans can skilfully use tools and interact with the environment by adapting their movement trajectory, contact force, and impedance. Motivated by the human versatility, we develop here a robot controller that concurrently adapts feedforward force, impedance, and reference trajectory when interacting with an unknown environment. In particular, the robot’s reference trajectory is adapted to limit the interaction force and maintain it at a desired level, while feedforward force and impedance adaptation compensates for the interaction with the environment. An analysis of the interaction dynamics using Lyapunov theory yields the conditions for convergence of the closed-loop interaction mediated by this controller. Simulations exhibit adaptive properties similar to human motor adaptation. The implementation of this controller for typical interaction tasks including drilling, cutting, and haptic exploration shows that this controller can outperform conventional controllers in contact tooling.