Website - handheldrobotics.org
Team:
Austin Gregg-Smith
Walterio Mayol-Cuevas
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Website - handheldrobotics.org
Team:
Austin Gregg-Smith
Walterio Mayol-Cuevas
https://youtu.be/PyY9jykQLDA
The Design and Evaluation of a Cooperative Handheld Robot
Published on May 15, 2015
Quote:
Abstract—This paper concerns itself with a relatively unexplored type of personal robot that operates in the tool space. Handheld robots aim to cooperate with the user to solve tasks and improve what tools can offer enhanced by actuation, sensing, and importantly, task knowledge. To this
end, we devised a new lightweight robotic platform that has 4
DoF and uses a cable driven continuum structure. Feedback
from the robot to the user is provided in an intuitive, implicit
manner by the robot end effector pointing towards the goal,
avoiding pointing, and/or refusing to perform an action when
it conflicts with the task specification. We evaluate two generic
tasks involving aiming in space and picking/placing objects with
a number of volunteers. Repeated measures ANOVA is used to
analyse results to show in which conditions an increased level of
automation in the handheld robot improves task performance
or user perception of task load. The robot is offered as an
open robotics platform and the results indicate directions to
improve on feedback and interaction mechanisms.
Article "Bristol Researchers Create Handheld 3D Printed Robots That Assist & Correct Users"
by Bridget Butler Millsaps
May 27, 2015
https://youtu.be/WN9I10sAtuU
Inverse Kinematics and Design of a Novel 6-DoF Handheld Robot Arm
Published on May 17, 2016
Quote:
We present a novel 6-DoF cable driven manipulator for handheld robotic tasks. Based on a coupled tendon approach, the arm is optimized to maximize movement speed and configuration space
while reducing the total mass of the arm. We propose a space carving approach to design optimal link geometry maximizing structural strength and joint limits while minimizing link mass. The design improves on similar non-handheld tendon-driven manipulators and reduces the required number of actuators to one per DoF. As the manipulator has one redundant joint, we present a 5-DoF inverse kinematics solution for the end effector pose. The inverse kinematics is solved by splitting the 6-DoF problem into two coupled 3-DoF problems and merging their results. A method
for gracefully degrading the output of the inverse kinematics is described for cases where the desired end effector pose is outside the configuration space. This is useful for settings where the user is in the control loop and can help the robot to get closer to the desired location. The design of the handheld robot is offered as open source. While our results and tools are aimed at handheld robotics, the design and approach is useful to non-handheld applications.
From the paper:
Austin Gregg-Smith and Walterio Mayol-Cuevas, Inverse Kinematics and Design of a Novel 6-DoF Handheld Robot Arm. IEEE International Conference on Robotics and Automation (ICRA), 2016.