A Method for Constraint Inference Using Pose and Wrench Measurements
Many physical tasks such as pulling out a drawer or wiping a table can be modeled with geometric constraints. These geometric constraints are characterized by restrictions on kinematic trajectories and reaction wrenches (forces and moments) of objects under the influence of the constraint. This pape...
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Zusammenfassung: | Many physical tasks such as pulling out a drawer or wiping a table can be
modeled with geometric constraints. These geometric constraints are
characterized by restrictions on kinematic trajectories and reaction wrenches
(forces and moments) of objects under the influence of the constraint. This
paper presents a method to infer geometric constraints involving unmodeled
objects in human demonstrations using both kinematic and wrench measurements.
Our approach takes a recording of a human demonstration and determines what
constraints are present, when they occur, and their parameters (e.g.
positions). By using both kinematic and wrench information, our methods are
able to reliably identify a variety of constraint types, even if the
constraints only exist for short durations within the demonstration. We present
a systematic approach to fitting arbitrary scleronomic constraint models to
kinematic and wrench measurements. Reaction forces are estimated from
measurements by removing friction. Position, orientation, force, and moment
error metrics are developed to provide systematic comparison between constraint
models. By conducting a user study, we show that our methods can reliably
identify constraints in realistic situations and confirm the value of including
forces and moments in the model regression and selection process. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2010.15916 |