Publication | Closed Access
Deep learning can accelerate grasp-optimized motion planning
66
Citations
36
References
2020
Year
Artificial IntelligenceEngineeringMachine LearningRobot PlanningDexterous ManipulationIntelligent RoboticsE-commerce Warehouse PickingE-commerce WarehousesRobot LearningHealth SciencesRobot Motion PlanningRoboticsMotion SynthesisComputer EngineeringComputer ScienceDeep LearningDeep Reinforcement LearningMotion PlanningPlanningObject Manipulation
Robots for picking in e-commerce warehouses require rapid computing of efficient and smooth robot arm motions between varying configurations. Recent results integrate grasp analysis with arm motion planning to compute optimal smooth arm motions; however, computation times on the order of tens of seconds dominate motion times. Recent advances in deep learning allow neural networks to quickly compute these motions; however, they lack the precision required to produce kinematically and dynamically feasible motions. While infeasible, the network-computed motions approximate the optimized results. The proposed method warm starts the optimization process by using the approximate motions as a starting point from which the optimizing motion planner refines to an optimized and feasible motion with few iterations. In experiments, the proposed deep learning-based warm-started optimizing motion planner reduces compute and motion time when compared to a sampling-based asymptotically optimal motion planner and an optimizing motion planner. When applied to grasp-optimized motion planning, the results suggest that deep learning can reduce the computation time by two orders of magnitude (300×), from 29 s to 80 ms, making it practical for e-commerce warehouse picking.
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