Robotic hand rotates objects using touch, not vision

A team of engineers from the University of California San Diego has developed an innovative approach to enable a robotic hand to rotate objects using only touch, without relying on vision. Inspired by how humans effortlessly handle objects without seeing them, the researchers built a robotic hand with 16 touch sensors attached to its palm and fingers. These low-cost touch sensors provide simple binary signals – touch or no touch – allowing the robotic hand to smoothly rotate various objects, including small toys, cans, fruits, and vegetables, without causing damage.

The new technique contrasts with traditional methods that use a few high-cost, high-resolution touch sensors on a small area of the robotic hand, primarily at the fingertips. Such approaches have limitations, including reduced sensing ability due to the small number of sensors, difficulties in simulating and using high-resolution touch sensors in real-world experiments, and reliance on vision.

In contrast, the team’s approach demonstrates that detailed texture information about an object is not necessary for the task. Instead, simple binary signals indicating contact with the sensors are sufficient for the robotic hand to perform in-hand rotation effectively. The large coverage of binary touch sensors provides the necessary 3D structure and orientation information about the object, enabling successful rotation without the need for vision.

To train the system, the researchers conducted simulations of a virtual robotic hand rotating diverse objects with irregular shapes. The system assessed which sensors on the hand were being touched by the object during rotation, as well as the current positions and actions of the hand’s joints. Based on this information, the system instructed the robotic hand on the appropriate joint movements.

Upon testing the real-life robotic hand with previously unseen objects, such as a tomato, pepper, can of peanut butter, and a toy rubber duck, the robotic hand successfully rotated the objects without stalling or losing its grip. While objects with complex shapes took longer to rotate, the robotic hand demonstrated its ability to rotate objects around different axes.

This groundbreaking approach opens up possibilities for robots to manipulate objects in the absence of visual cues, making it a valuable advancement in the field of robotics. The team presented their work at the 2023 Robotics: Science and Systems Conference.

Posted in

Aihub Team

Leave a Comment





Is AI electricity or the telephone?

Is AI electricity or the telephone?

Introducing Superalignment

Introducing Superalignment

GPT-4 API general availability and deprecation of older models in the Completions API

GPT-4 API general availability and deprecation of older models in the Completions API

Democratic inputs to AI

Democratic inputs to AI

DALL-E 2 Chimera prompts

DALL-E 2 Chimera prompts

Can AI predict the future?

Can AI predict the future?

Bing is sadly too desperate to make AI work

Bing is sadly too desperate to make AI work

AI progress is scaring people

AI progress is scaring people

AI in the modeling industry

AI in the modeling industry

AI Driven Testing

AI Driven Testing

AI as Co-Creator of Test Design

AI as Co-Creator of Test Design

 The Good, The Bad, & The Hallucinatory – How AI can help and hurt secure development

 The Good, The Bad, & The Hallucinatory – How AI can help and hurt secure development

The CX Paradigm Shift: Exploring Generative AI’s Impact on Customer Experience

The CX Paradigm Shift: Exploring Generative AI’s Impact on Customer Experience

Edge Computing Expo Europe, 26-27 September 2023

Edge Computing Expo Europe, 26-27 September 2023

Digital Transformation Week Europe | 26-27 September 2023

Digital Transformation Week Europe | 26-27 September 2023

The Security of Artificial Intelligence

The Security of Artificial Intelligence

AI Combined with Automation is the Perfect Marriage for Scalable, Intelligent Operations

AI Combined with Automation is the Perfect Marriage for Scalable, Intelligent Operations

AI and Phishing: What’s the Risk to Your Organization?

AI and Phishing: What’s the Risk to Your Organization?

Why Claude AI is your new go-to for complex tasks

Why Claude AI is your new go-to for complex tasks

The Smart Home Jury Is Still Out on Matter, AI Could Help

The Smart Home Jury Is Still Out on Matter, AI Could Help

Explore Jasper AI, a writing tool that makes creators’ lives easier

Explore Jasper AI, a writing tool that makes creators’ lives easier

Enjoy the journey while your business runs on autopilot

Enjoy the journey while your business runs on autopilot

ChatGPT failed to get service status: Fixes and alternatives to try

ChatGPT failed to get service status: Fixes and alternatives to try

ChatGPT Down? OpenAI Chatbot ChatGPT Reportedly Hit by Global Outage, Users Lodge Complaints on Twitter

ChatGPT Down? OpenAI Chatbot ChatGPT Reportedly Hit by Global Outage, Users Lodge Complaints on Twitter

Blue Chip Ads Feeding Unreliable AI-Generated News Websites

Blue Chip Ads Feeding Unreliable AI-Generated News Websites

Social media algorithms are still failing to counter misleading content

Social media algorithms are still failing to counter misleading content

Rishabh Mehrotra, research lead, Spotify: Multi-stakeholder thinking with AI

Rishabh Mehrotra, research lead, Spotify: Multi-stakeholder thinking with AI

Researchers from Microsoft and global leading universities study the ‘offensive AI’ threat

Researchers from Microsoft and global leading universities study the ‘offensive AI’ threat

GTC 2021: Nvidia debuts accelerated computing libraries, partners with Google, IBM, and others to speed up quantum research

GTC 2021: Nvidia debuts accelerated computing libraries, partners with Google, IBM, and others to speed up quantum research

Facebook is developing a news-summarising AI called TL;DR

Facebook is developing a news-summarising AI called TL;DR