Highly dexterous four-fingered robotic hand offers gravity-free rotation


SOURCE: INTERESTINGENGINEERING.COM
JUN 28, 2024

Jijo Malayil

The team at the University of Bristol have created a four-fingered robotic hand with artificial tactile fingertips capable of rotating objects such as balls and toys in any direction and orientation.

Ateam of researchers at Bristol University has developed a highly dexterous four-fingered robotic hand with artificial tactile fingertips.

Their robotic hand, named AnyRotate, can sense and rotate objects in any direction and orientation, even when the hand is upside down — a capability never achieved before.

This level of dexterity for a robot hand necessitated the extraction and utilization of rich touch information for accurate motor control.

Researchers suggest that enhancing the dexterity of robot hands could advance automated tasks like handling supermarket goods or sorting recycling waste.

The details of the team’s research were published in GitHub.

Furthering robot dexterity

Advancing robot manipulation includes challenges in in-hand manipulation with multi-fingered hands due to actuation complexity, precise control, and environmental uncertainties.

Recent strides, notably by OpenAI, rely on vision systems prone to self-occlusion, requiring multiple cameras. Proprioception and touch sensing have emerged to address object rotation, are pivotal for spatial manipulation even during motion, and demand comprehension of complex physics and gravity-invariant grasping.

According to researchers, tactile sensing, crucial for detailed robot-object interaction, faces gaps between simulation and reality, limiting high-resolution data use. Enhanced tactile representation promises heightened dexterity and expanded capabilities in in-hand tasks, underscoring the potential for future advancements.

The team uses an hand (16 DoF) with tactile sensors attached on the fingertips.

The team uses an allegro hand (16 DoF) with tactile sensors attached to the fingertips.

Using advanced tactile sensing, the team developed a robot system for rotating objects in hand across multiple axes unaffected by gravity. They combined goal-oriented reinforcement learning (RL) with dense tactile feedback.

“In Bristol, our artificial tactile fingertip uses a 3D-printed mesh of pin-like papillae on the underside of the skin, based on copying the internal structure of human skin,” said Professor Nathan Lepora from the University in a statement.

Initially, reseachers established a simulation-to-real-world framework and developed a detailed tactile representation to train a precise policy for multi-axis object manipulation.

Next, they train an observation model to predict contact pose and force from tactile images, crucial for stable manipulation in noisy environments. In real-world applications, they equipped a four-fingered, fully actuated robot hand with tactile sensors on its fingertips to ensure stable and accurate in-hand object rotation.

Advanced tactile sensing

In real-world tests, the team’s dense tactile policy effectively handles different objects, rotating them in various directions better than simpler tactile methods.

Surprisingly, even without specific slip detection, advanced tactile sensors can sense when objects start to move and adjust accordingly. According to researchers, this shows how detailed tactile sensing enhances our ability to manipulate objects securely in hand, emphasizing its crucial role in robotics.

This study showcased a general policy using advanced tactile sensing to rotate objects in hand across any axis and direction, a milestone in robotic dexterity.

Rotating objects in-hand across multiple axes, unaffected by gravity, using detailed tactile feedback from simulation to reality.

Rotating objects in-hand across multiple axes, unaffected by gravity, using detailed tactile feedback from simulation to reality.

While dense touch performed well, it struggled with box-shaped or elongated objects due to similar tactile feedback from different grasping points. Enhancing tactile representations with tactile images, contact force fields, or integrating vision could improve robustness.

The Allegro Hand’s actuation limitations under certain orientations highlight the need for more capable and affordable hardware. Achieving effortless object manipulation in space through tactile feedback echoes human dexterity goals, emphasizing the importance of tactile sensing for future advancements in robotics.

ABOUT THE EDITOR

Jijo Malayil Jijo is an automotive and business journalist based in India. Armed with a BA in History (Honors) from St. Stephen's College, Delhi University, and a PG diploma in Journalism from the Indian Institute of Mass Communication, Delhi, he has worked for news agencies, national newspapers, and automotive magazines. In his spare time, he likes to go off-roading, engage in political discourse, travel, and teach languages.