On robot compliance. A cerebellar control approach
Metadatos
Afficher la notice complèteAuteur
Abadía Tercedor, Ignacio; Naveros Arrabal, Francisco; Garrido Alcázar, Jesús Alberto; Ros Vidal, Eduardo; Luque Sola, Niceto RafaelEditorial
IEEE
Date
2021-05Referencia bibliográfica
Published version: I. Abadía, F. Naveros, J. A. Garrido, E. Ros and N. R. Luque, "On Robot Compliance: A Cerebellar Control Approach," in IEEE Transactions on Cybernetics, vol. 51, no. 5, pp. 2476-2489, May 2021, doi: 10.1109/TCYB.2019.2945498
Patrocinador
Universidad de Granada; Junta Andalucía; FEDER; MINECO-FEDER TIN2016-81041-R; EU HBP-SGA2, (H2020-RIA, 785907); Juan de la Cierva (IJCI-2016-27385)Résumé
The work presented here is a novel biological approach for the compliant control of a robotic arm in real time
(RT). We integrate a spiking cerebellar network at the core of a feedback control loop performing torque driven control. The
spiking cerebellar controller provides torque commands allowing for accurate and coordinated arm movements. To compute these
output motor commands, the spiking cerebellar controller receives the robot’s sensorial signals, the robot’s goal behaviour,
and an instructive signal. These input signals are translated into a set of evolving spiking patterns, representing univocally a
specific system state at every point of time. Spike Timing-Dependent Plasticity (STDP) is then supported, allowing for
building adaptive control. The spiking cerebellar controller continuously adapts the torque commands provided to the robot
from experience as STDP is deployed. Adaptive torque commands, in turn, help the spiking cerebellar controller to cope
with built-in elastic elements within the robot’s actuators mimicking human muscles (inherently elastic). We propose a
natural integration of a bio-inspired control scheme, based on the cerebellum, with a compliant robot. We prove that our compliant approach outperforms the accuracy of the default factory installed position control in a set of tasks used for addressing
cerebellar motor behaviour: controlling six degrees of freedom (DoF) in (i) smooth movements, (ii) fast ballistic movements and
(iii) unstructured scenario compliant movements.