by NovaOne » Sun Dec 16, 2007 1:04 pm
by NovaOne
Sun Dec 16, 2007 1:04 pm
A friend of mine, subscribes to
http://www.biomch-l.org/ and showed me this thread yesterday, ( I was going to just post the takeanishi URL, but is it better to quote Massimiliano fully?)
Dear All,
There is a robot capable of solving the mechanical
singularity of the stretched knee:
http://www.takanishi.mech.waseda.ac.jp/research/wabian/index.htm Suggested readings:
Human-like Walking with Knee Stretched, Heel-contact and
Toe-off Motion by a Humanoid Robot
Yu Ogura; Kazushi Shimomura; Hideki Kondo; Akitoshi
Morishima; Tatsu Okubo; Shimpei Momoki; Hun-ok Lim; Atsuo
Takanishi
Intelligent Robots and Systems, 2006 IEEE/RSJ
International Conference on
Volume , Issue , Oct. 2006 Page(s):3976 - 3981
Development of a new humanoid robot WABIAN-2
Yu Ogura; Aikawa, H.; Shimomura, K.; Kondo, H.; Morishima,
A.; Hun-ok Lim; Takanishi, A.
Robotics and Automation, 2006. ICRA 2006. Proceedings 2006
IEEE International Conference on
Volume , Issue , May 15-19, 2006 Page(s): 76 - 81
and related references.
Kind regards
Massimiliano
Takanishi Lab -
http://www.takanishi.mech.waseda.ac.jp/ RoboCasa -
http://www.robocasa.net ---------------------------------------------------------------
Information about BIOMCH-L:
http://www.Biomch-L.org Archives:
http://listserv.surfnet.nl/archives/Biomch-L.html ---------------------------------------------------------------
I have been looking for papers relating to bipeds to help me understand the basics of things like: biped balance, ZMP, COM and inverse kinematics, and came across this excellent masters thesis. (I have found no reference to Felix or Jupp on Robosavvy but he may be known to some of you?) .
http://www.informatik.uni-freiburg.de/~faber/Learning_Fast_Bipedal_Locomotion.pdfHeres an quotes from Felix Faber's work:
Furthermore, ZMP-controlled gaits result in ’bent-Knee’ motions in order to
avoid inverse kinematic singularities. These motions do not look natural and
place significant limits on the types of walking styles that can be produced.
In contrast to ZMP-based approaches my approach does not require an accu-
rate model of the robot and the environment. The approach presented here
does also not rely on highly precise controllers for following precomputed
joint trajectories, but works with low-cost servo-motors. As no dynamic
equations of motion have to be solved, this approach has a low computational
complexity. Using the gait presented in this thesis, a more human-like mo-
tion is possible using straight legs for walking, compared to the ’bent-knee’
motions of ZMP-controlled gaits.
Interesting stuff
Its a bit beyond me at the moment,(understatement!) but I hope this post is useful for some of you involved in tackling some of the more challenging aspects of biped development?
A friend of mine, subscribes to
http://www.biomch-l.org/ and showed me this thread yesterday, ( I was going to just post the takeanishi URL, but is it better to quote Massimiliano fully?)
Dear All,
There is a robot capable of solving the mechanical
singularity of the stretched knee:
http://www.takanishi.mech.waseda.ac.jp/research/wabian/index.htm Suggested readings:
Human-like Walking with Knee Stretched, Heel-contact and
Toe-off Motion by a Humanoid Robot
Yu Ogura; Kazushi Shimomura; Hideki Kondo; Akitoshi
Morishima; Tatsu Okubo; Shimpei Momoki; Hun-ok Lim; Atsuo
Takanishi
Intelligent Robots and Systems, 2006 IEEE/RSJ
International Conference on
Volume , Issue , Oct. 2006 Page(s):3976 - 3981
Development of a new humanoid robot WABIAN-2
Yu Ogura; Aikawa, H.; Shimomura, K.; Kondo, H.; Morishima,
A.; Hun-ok Lim; Takanishi, A.
Robotics and Automation, 2006. ICRA 2006. Proceedings 2006
IEEE International Conference on
Volume , Issue , May 15-19, 2006 Page(s): 76 - 81
and related references.
Kind regards
Massimiliano
Takanishi Lab -
http://www.takanishi.mech.waseda.ac.jp/ RoboCasa -
http://www.robocasa.net ---------------------------------------------------------------
Information about BIOMCH-L:
http://www.Biomch-L.org Archives:
http://listserv.surfnet.nl/archives/Biomch-L.html ---------------------------------------------------------------
I have been looking for papers relating to bipeds to help me understand the basics of things like: biped balance, ZMP, COM and inverse kinematics, and came across this excellent masters thesis. (I have found no reference to Felix or Jupp on Robosavvy but he may be known to some of you?) .
http://www.informatik.uni-freiburg.de/~faber/Learning_Fast_Bipedal_Locomotion.pdfHeres an quotes from Felix Faber's work:
Furthermore, ZMP-controlled gaits result in ’bent-Knee’ motions in order to
avoid inverse kinematic singularities. These motions do not look natural and
place significant limits on the types of walking styles that can be produced.
In contrast to ZMP-based approaches my approach does not require an accu-
rate model of the robot and the environment. The approach presented here
does also not rely on highly precise controllers for following precomputed
joint trajectories, but works with low-cost servo-motors. As no dynamic
equations of motion have to be solved, this approach has a low computational
complexity. Using the gait presented in this thesis, a more human-like mo-
tion is possible using straight legs for walking, compared to the ’bent-knee’
motions of ZMP-controlled gaits.
Interesting stuff
Its a bit beyond me at the moment,(understatement!) but I hope this post is useful for some of you involved in tackling some of the more challenging aspects of biped development?