Russ Tedrake


RI Seminar: Russ Tedrake: Robust motion planning for walking robots and robotic birds

Uploaded on Oct 31, 2011

Robust motion planning for walking robots and robotic birds
Russ Tedrake
Associate Professor, MIT

October 28, 2011

Abstract

Building robots that can walk or fly with the dexterity of an animal is hard. Our best models of these robots are complicated because they are nonlinear and underactuated, and because the robots are fundamentally subjected to large sources of uncertainty relative to their control authority - for instance, large disturbances like a gust of wind and/or model uncertainty because they are locomoting on unknown terrain. While the field of robotics has seen some success from "intuitive" controllers based on simple models, I believe that a more algorithmic approach is required to scale much beyond the complexity and performance of today's robots.

In this talk, I will demonstrate that combinations of randomized motion planning and trajectory optimization can produce open-loop trajectories for models of the required complexity (nonlinear, hybrid, underactuated). But when one goes to implement these on the real systems, they inevitably fail, in part because trajectory motion planning by itself doesn't provide any language for talking about robustness. Therefore, I'll describe tools from robustness analysis (both linear and nonlinear), feedback planning, and planning in belief space that can help close this gap, and produce solutions that work on real systems. These ingredients can be added on top of most existing motion planners, and can make a substantial difference when working with high-performance dynamic robots.

Speaker Biography

Russ is the X Consortium Associate Professor of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science and Aeronautics and Astronautics at MIT, and a member of the Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Lab. He is a recipient of the NSF CAREER Award, the MIT Jerome Saltzer Award for undergraduate teaching, the DARPA Young Faculty Award, and was named a Microsoft Research New Faculty Fellow.

Russ received his B.S.E. in Computer Engineering from the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, in 1999, and his Ph.D. in Electrical Engineering and Computer Science from MIT in 2004, working with Sebastian Seung. After graduation, he joined the MIT Brain and Cognitive Sciences Department as a Postdoctoral Associate. During his education, he has also spent time at Microsoft, Microsoft Research, and the Santa Fe Institute.
 

Robot building and barefoot running with MIT's Russ Tedrake

Published on Aug 28, 2012

Read the MIT News profile of Russ Tedrake, the X Consortium Associate Professor of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science and Aeronautics and Astronautics at MIT, and a member of the Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Lab, on our website:
"Connoisseur of chaos"
Where other roboticists try to suppress the complex dynamics of mechanical systems, Russ Tedrake exploits them, to make control more efficient and versatile.

by Larry Hardesty, MIT News Office
August 29, 2012
 

Russ Tedrake: Underactuated Robotics, Control, Dynamics and Touch | AI Podcast #114 with Lex Fridman

Aug 9, 2020

Russ Tedrake is a roboticist and professor at MIT and vice president of robotics research at TRI. He works on control of robots in interesting, complicated, underactuated, stochastic, difficult to model situations. This conversation is part of the Artificial Intelligence podcast.

Outline:
0:00 - Introduction
4:29 - Passive dynamic walking
9:40 - Animal movement
13:34 - Control vs Dynamics
15:49 - Bipedal walking
20:56 - Running barefoot
33:01 - Think rigorously with machine learning
44:05 - DARPA Robotics Challenge
1:07:14 - When will a robot become UFC champion
1:18:32 - Black Mirror Robot Dog
1:34:01 - Robot control
1:47:00 - Simulating robots
2:00:33 - Home robotics
2:03:40 - Soft robotics
2:07:25 - Underactuated robotics
2:20:42 - Touch
2:28:55 - Book recommendations
2:40:08 - Advice to young people
2:44:20 - Meaning of life
 
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