Publication | Closed Access
Tactile object recognition using deep learning and dropout
111
Citations
34
References
2014
Year
Unknown Venue
Tactile SensingConvolutional Neural NetworkMachine VisionMachine LearningImage AnalysisEngineeringPattern RecognitionDexterous ManipulationHaptic TechnologyPower GraspingComputer ScienceRobot LearningDeep LearningObject ManipulationComputer Vision
Recognizing grasped objects with tactile sensors is beneficial in many situations, as other sensor information like vision is not always reliable. In this paper, we aim for multimodal object recognition by power grasping of objects with an unknown orientation and position relation to the hand. Few robots have the necessary tactile sensors to reliably recognize objects: in this study the multifingered hand of TWENDY-ONE is used, which has distributed skin sensors covering most of the hand, 6 axis F/T sensors in each fingertip, and provides information about the joint angles. Moreover, the hand is compliant. When using tactile sensors, it is not clear what kinds of features are useful for object recognition. Recently, deep learning has shown promising results. Nevertheless, deep learning has rarely been used in robotics and to our best knowledge never for tactile sensing, probably because it is difficult to gather many samples with tactile sensors. Our results show a clear improvement when using a denoising autoencoder with dropout compared to traditional neural networks. Nevertheless, a higher number of layers did not prove to be beneficial.
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