This paper presents an embedded control architecture constructed for Robo-Erectus, a soccer-playing humanoid robot developed at the Advanced Robotics and Intelligent Control Centre of Singapore Polytechnic. The Robo-Erectus team has participated in the KidSize category of RoboCup's Humanoid League since 2002, collecting different awards. The latest version of Robo-Erectus has many capabilities that can be exploited to improve the robot's behavior. The new embedded controller has made possible the first stage of the performance (displayed during RoboCup 2007), including network communication, mapping, and localization. The new mechanical, electronic design, embedded control architecture, and control schemes are described in this paper. In addition to the hardware, the paper presents details of the modules for gait generation, vision, behavior control, and communication.
As rehabilitation robots are increasingly serving to improve the quality of life for physically disabled people in clinical environments, the concept of emotional expressiveness in robots becomes increasingly important. The human perception of robot's emotional expressions plays a crucial role in human robot interaction. Virtual expression systems outperform hardware systems in realizing human like expressions due the limitations in hardware actuators and advances in animation tools. This paper evaluates the human perception of robot's emotional expressions with two different virtual emotional expression systems: one where the robot exhibits emotions through icon faced expressions and in other the robot exhibits emotions through human faced expressions in clinical environment. A rehabilitation HRI research robot Robbie is introduced and the results of the comparative study on human perception of robot's emotional expressions with two different systems are discussed.
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