4.3 Article

Dynamic motion learning for multi-DOF flexible-joint robots using active-passive motor babbling through deep learning

Journal

ADVANCED ROBOTICS
Volume 31, Issue 18, Pages 1002-1015

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/01691864.2017.1383939

Keywords

Motor babbling; flexible-joint robot; dynamic motion learning; recurrent neural network; deep learning

Categories

Funding

  1. JSPS [15J12683, 2522005]
  2. Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science, and Technology
  3. 'Fundamental Study for Intelligent Machine to Coexist with Nature' Research Institute for Science and Engineering, Waseda University
  4. MEXT [15H01710, 24119003]
  5. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [15H01710, 15J12683] Funding Source: KAKEN

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This paper proposes a learning strategy for robots with flexible joints having multi-degrees of freedom in order to achieve dynamic motion tasks. In spite of there being several potential benefits of flexible-joint robots such as exploitation of intrinsic dynamics and passive adaptation to environmental changes with mechanical compliance, controlling such robots is challenging because of increased complexity of their dynamics. To achieve dynamic movements, we introduce a two-phase learning framework of the body dynamics of the robot using a recurrent neural network motivated by a deep learning strategy. The proposed methodology comprises a pre-training phase with motor babbling and a fine-tuning phase with additional learning of the target tasks. In the pre-training phase, we consider active and passive exploratory motions for efficient acquisition of body dynamics. In the fine-tuning phase, the learned body dynamics are adjusted for specific tasks. We demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed methodology in achieving dynamic tasks involving constrained movement requiring interactions with the environment on a simulated robot model and an actual PR2 robot both of which have a compliantly actuated seven degree-of-freedom arm. The results illustrate a reduction in the required number of training iterations for task learning and generalization capabilities for untrained situations.

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