Sensorimotor Primitives for Robotic Assembly Skills - Robotics Institute Carnegie Mellon University

Sensorimotor Primitives for Robotic Assembly Skills

James Morrow and Pradeep Khosla
Conference Paper, Proceedings of (ICRA) International Conference on Robotics and Automation, Vol. 2, pp. 1894 - 1899, May, 1995

Abstract

Many researchers are interested in developing robust, skill-achieving robot programs. The authors propose the development of a sensorimotor primitive layer which bridges the gap between the robot/sensor system and a class of tasks by providing useful encapsulations of sensing and action. Skills can then be constructed from this library of sensor-driven primitives. This reflects a move away from the separation of sensing and action in robot programming of task strategies towards the integration of sensing and action in a domain-general way for broad classes of tasks. For the domain of rigid-body assembly, the authors exploit the motion constraints which define assembly to develop force sensor-driven primitives. The authors report on the experimental results of a D-connector insertion skill implemented using several force-driven primitives.

BibTeX

@conference{Morrow-1995-13882,
author = {James Morrow and Pradeep Khosla},
title = {Sensorimotor Primitives for Robotic Assembly Skills},
booktitle = {Proceedings of (ICRA) International Conference on Robotics and Automation},
year = {1995},
month = {May},
volume = {2},
pages = {1894 - 1899},
}