Active Haptic Perception in Robots: A Review

In the past few years a new scenario for robot-based applications has emerged. Service and mobile robots have opened new market niches. Also, new frameworks for shop-floor robot applications have been developed. In all these contexts, robots are requested to perform tasks within open-ended condition...

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Main Authors: Lucia Seminara, Paolo Gastaldo, Simon J. Watt, Kenneth F. Valyear, Fernando Zuher, Fulvio Mastrogiovanni
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2019-07-01
Series:Frontiers in Neurorobotics
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fnbot.2019.00053/full
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spelling doaj-20bc8b2489704c11afb17c7c28c69dcc2020-11-25T01:20:31ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Neurorobotics1662-52182019-07-011310.3389/fnbot.2019.00053467142Active Haptic Perception in Robots: A ReviewLucia Seminara0Paolo Gastaldo1Simon J. Watt2Kenneth F. Valyear3Fernando Zuher4Fulvio Mastrogiovanni5Department of Electrical, Electronics and Telecommunication Engineering and Naval Architecture, University of Genoa, Genoa, ItalyDepartment of Electrical, Electronics and Telecommunication Engineering and Naval Architecture, University of Genoa, Genoa, ItalySchool of Psychology, Bangor University, Bangor, United KingdomSchool of Psychology, Bangor University, Bangor, United KingdomDepartment of Computer Science, Institute of Mathematics and Computer Science, University of São Paulo, São Carlos, BrazilDepartment of Computer Science, Bioengineering, Robotics, and Systems Engineering, University of Genoa, Genoa, ItalyIn the past few years a new scenario for robot-based applications has emerged. Service and mobile robots have opened new market niches. Also, new frameworks for shop-floor robot applications have been developed. In all these contexts, robots are requested to perform tasks within open-ended conditions, possibly dynamically varying. These new requirements ask also for a change of paradigm in the design of robots: on-line and safe feedback motion control becomes the core of modern robot systems. Future robots will learn autonomously, interact safely and possess qualities like self-maintenance. Attaining these features would have been relatively easy if a complete model of the environment was available, and if the robot actuators could execute motion commands perfectly relative to this model. Unfortunately, a complete world model is not available and robots have to plan and execute the tasks in the presence of environmental uncertainties which makes sensing an important component of new generation robots. For this reason, today's new generation robots are equipped with more and more sensing components, and consequently they are ready to actively deal with the high complexity of the real world. Complex sensorimotor tasks such as exploration require coordination between the motor system and the sensory feedback. For robot control purposes, sensory feedback should be adequately organized in terms of relevant features and the associated data representation. In this paper, we propose an overall functional picture linking sensing to action in closed-loop sensorimotor control of robots for touch (hands, fingers). Basic qualities of haptic perception in humans inspire the models and categories comprising the proposed classification. The objective is to provide a reasoned, principled perspective on the connections between different taxonomies used in the Robotics and human haptic literature. The specific case of active exploration is chosen to ground interesting use cases. Two reasons motivate this choice. First, in the literature on haptics, exploration has been treated only to a limited extent compared to grasping and manipulation. Second, exploration involves specific robot behaviors that exploit distributed and heterogeneous sensory data.https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fnbot.2019.00053/fullhaptic perceptionactive touchexplorationrobot touchhumans and robotssensorimotor control
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lucia Seminara
Paolo Gastaldo
Simon J. Watt
Kenneth F. Valyear
Fernando Zuher
Fulvio Mastrogiovanni
spellingShingle Lucia Seminara
Paolo Gastaldo
Simon J. Watt
Kenneth F. Valyear
Fernando Zuher
Fulvio Mastrogiovanni
Active Haptic Perception in Robots: A Review
Frontiers in Neurorobotics
haptic perception
active touch
exploration
robot touch
humans and robots
sensorimotor control
author_facet Lucia Seminara
Paolo Gastaldo
Simon J. Watt
Kenneth F. Valyear
Fernando Zuher
Fulvio Mastrogiovanni
author_sort Lucia Seminara
title Active Haptic Perception in Robots: A Review
title_short Active Haptic Perception in Robots: A Review
title_full Active Haptic Perception in Robots: A Review
title_fullStr Active Haptic Perception in Robots: A Review
title_full_unstemmed Active Haptic Perception in Robots: A Review
title_sort active haptic perception in robots: a review
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Neurorobotics
issn 1662-5218
publishDate 2019-07-01
description In the past few years a new scenario for robot-based applications has emerged. Service and mobile robots have opened new market niches. Also, new frameworks for shop-floor robot applications have been developed. In all these contexts, robots are requested to perform tasks within open-ended conditions, possibly dynamically varying. These new requirements ask also for a change of paradigm in the design of robots: on-line and safe feedback motion control becomes the core of modern robot systems. Future robots will learn autonomously, interact safely and possess qualities like self-maintenance. Attaining these features would have been relatively easy if a complete model of the environment was available, and if the robot actuators could execute motion commands perfectly relative to this model. Unfortunately, a complete world model is not available and robots have to plan and execute the tasks in the presence of environmental uncertainties which makes sensing an important component of new generation robots. For this reason, today's new generation robots are equipped with more and more sensing components, and consequently they are ready to actively deal with the high complexity of the real world. Complex sensorimotor tasks such as exploration require coordination between the motor system and the sensory feedback. For robot control purposes, sensory feedback should be adequately organized in terms of relevant features and the associated data representation. In this paper, we propose an overall functional picture linking sensing to action in closed-loop sensorimotor control of robots for touch (hands, fingers). Basic qualities of haptic perception in humans inspire the models and categories comprising the proposed classification. The objective is to provide a reasoned, principled perspective on the connections between different taxonomies used in the Robotics and human haptic literature. The specific case of active exploration is chosen to ground interesting use cases. Two reasons motivate this choice. First, in the literature on haptics, exploration has been treated only to a limited extent compared to grasping and manipulation. Second, exploration involves specific robot behaviors that exploit distributed and heterogeneous sensory data.
topic haptic perception
active touch
exploration
robot touch
humans and robots
sensorimotor control
url https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fnbot.2019.00053/full
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