4.7 Article

HERB 2.0: Lessons Learned From Developing a Mobile Manipulator for the Home

Journal

PROCEEDINGS OF THE IEEE
Volume 100, Issue 8, Pages 2410-2428

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/JPROC.2012.2200561

Keywords

Human-robot interaction; mobile manipulation; motion planning; perception; personal robotics; trajectory optimization

Funding

  1. Intel
  2. Caja Madrid Fellowship
  3. Karlsruhe House of Young Scientists
  4. Fulbright Fellowship
  5. [DARPA-BAA-10-28]
  6. [NSF-IIS-0916557]
  7. [NSF-EEC-0540865]

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We present the hardware design, software architecture, and core algorithms of HERB 2.0, a bimanual mobile manipulator developed at the Personal Robotics Lab at Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, PA. We have developed HERB 2.0 to perform useful tasks for and with people in human environments. We exploit two key paradigms in human environments: that they have structure that a robot can learn, adapt and exploit, and that they demand general-purpose capability in robotic systems. In this paper, we reveal some of the structure present in everyday environments that we have been able to harness for manipulation and interaction, comment on the particular challenges on working in human spaces, and describe some of the lessons we learned from extensively testing our integrated platform in kitchen and office environments.

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