In this work we address the problem of finding replacements of missing objects that are needed for the execution of human-like manipulation tasks. This is a usual problem that is easily solved by humans provided their natural knowledge to find object substitutions: using a knife as a screwdriver or a book as a cutting board. On the other hand, in robotic applications, objects required in the task should be included in advance in the problem definition. If any of these objects is missing from the scenario, the conventional approach is to manually redefine the problem according to the available objects in the scene. In this work we propose an automatic way of finding object substitutions for the execution of manipulation tasks. The approach uses a logic-based planner to generate a plan from a prototypical problem definition and searches for replacements in the scene when some of the objects involved in the plan are missing. This is done by means of a repository of objects and attributes with roles, which is used to identify the affordances of the unknown objects in the scene. Planning actions are grounded using a novel approach that encodes the semantic structure of manipulation actions. The system was evaluated in a KUKA arm platform for the task of preparing a salad with successful results.
The goal of this study is to provide an architecture for a generic definition of robot manipulation actions. We emphasize that the representation of actions presented here is "procedural". Thus, we will define the structural elements of our action representations as execution protocols. To achieve this, manipulations are defined using three levels. The toplevel defines objects, their relations and the actions in an abstract and symbolic way. A mid-level sequencer, with which the action primitives are chained, is used to structure the actual action execution, which is performed via the bottom level. This (lowest) level collects data from sensors and communicates with the control system of the robot. This method enables robot manipulators to execute the same action in different situations i.e. on different objects with different positions and orientations. In addition, two methods of detecting action failure are provided which are necessary to handle faults in system. To demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed framework, several different actions are performed on our robotic setup and results are shown. This way we are creating a library of human-like robot actions, which can be used by higher-level task planners to execute more complex tasks.
When a robot has to imitate an observed action sequence, it must first understand the inherent characteristic features of the individual actions. Such features need to reflect the semantics of the action with a high degree of invariance between different demonstrations of the same action. At the same time the machine needs to be able to execute the action sequence in any appropriate situation. In this study, we introduce a new library of actions, which is a generic framework for executing manipulation actions on robotic systems by combining features that capture action semantics with a framework for execution. We focus on manipulation actions and first create a generic representation consisting of symbolic and sub-symbolic components. To link these two domains we introduce a finite state machine allowing for sequential execution with error handling. The framework is developed from observing humans which provides us with a high degree of grounding. To quantitatively evaluate the scalability of the proposed approach, we conducted a large set of experiments involving different actions performed either individually or sequentially with various types of objects in different scene contexts.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.