This paper discusses the theoretical background and practical implementation of a large-scale, low-performance haptic remote control setup. The experimental system consists of a pair of KUKA Light Weight Robots (LWR) coupled to a Willow Garage Personal Robot (PR2) via two different robotic frameworks. The haptic "performance" is, of course, not comparable to dedicated haptic applications, but has its use as a test-bed for interaction between "legacy" service robot systems, that have not been especially designed for mutual haptic interaction. We discuss some major application problems, and the future work needed for nonuniform robot coupling. Beside haptic coupling, we provide the human operator with visual feedback. To this end, the head movements of the human operator are coupled to the head movement of the PR2 and the images of the eye cameras are displayed to the human operator using a wearable display. The presented teleoperation application is furthermore an example of the integration of two component-based robotic frameworks namely OROCOS (Open Robot Control Software)and ROS (Robot Operating System) Experimental results regarding the haptic coupling are presented using an "artistic" painting task for qualitative results, and a hard contact at the slave side for quantitative results.
Haptic Coupling with Augmented Feedback between Two KUKA Light-Weight Robots and the PR2 Robot Arms
SCIONI, Enea;
2011
Abstract
This paper discusses the theoretical background and practical implementation of a large-scale, low-performance haptic remote control setup. The experimental system consists of a pair of KUKA Light Weight Robots (LWR) coupled to a Willow Garage Personal Robot (PR2) via two different robotic frameworks. The haptic "performance" is, of course, not comparable to dedicated haptic applications, but has its use as a test-bed for interaction between "legacy" service robot systems, that have not been especially designed for mutual haptic interaction. We discuss some major application problems, and the future work needed for nonuniform robot coupling. Beside haptic coupling, we provide the human operator with visual feedback. To this end, the head movements of the human operator are coupled to the head movement of the PR2 and the images of the eye cameras are displayed to the human operator using a wearable display. The presented teleoperation application is furthermore an example of the integration of two component-based robotic frameworks namely OROCOS (Open Robot Control Software)and ROS (Robot Operating System) Experimental results regarding the haptic coupling are presented using an "artistic" painting task for qualitative results, and a hard contact at the slave side for quantitative results.File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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