Publication | Open Access
Approaches to robotic teleoperation in a disaster scenario: From supervised autonomy to direct control
56
Citations
23
References
2014
Year
The ability of robotic systems to effectively address disaster scenarios that are potentially dangerous for human operators is continuing to grow as a research and development field. This leverages research from areas such as bimanual manipulation, dexterous grasping, bipedal locomotion, computer vision, sensing, object segmentation, varying degrees of autonomy, and operator control/feedback. This paper describes the development of a semi-autonomous bimanual dexterous robotic system that comes to the aid of a mannequin simulating an injured victim by operating a fire extinguisher, affixing a cervical collar, cooperatively placing the victim on a spineboard with another bimanual robot, and relocating the victim. This system accomplishes these tasks through a series of control modalities that range from supervised autonomy to full teleoperation and allows the control model to be chosen and optimized for a specific subtask. We present a description of the hardware platform, the software control architecture, a human-in-the-loop computer vision algorithm, and an infrastructure to use a variety of user input devices in combination with autonomous control to compete several dexterous tasks. The effectiveness of the system was demonstrated in both laboratory and live outdoor demonstrations.
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