MIN-Fakultät
Fachbereich Informatik
TAMS

Grasping with an artificial hand

BarrettHand

CupTop
Grasping objects is one of the basic skills for a service robot. Although it has been a research topic for many years, generating suitable grasps for objects is still one of the major problems in robotics. Several solutions address this problem like force optimization, optimization of the contact points with heuristics, etc.
Another way to teach a robot how to grasp an object is to use learning by demonstration. But this method is still error-prone and the detection of movements made by the instructor and occlusion during object grasping makes the problem even more complicated. Nevertheless useful results can be achieved with teaching by demonstration (see Interaction-Page for details)

The service robot TASER is equipped with a three finger BarrettHand, it can be used to grasp a wide range of objects of our daylie lives. One problem in grasping objects is the grasp evaluation. Criteria related to forces miss the object semantics completely. A grasp of a cup from the top might be very force stable but unusable if something should be filled into the cup.
A novel criterion related to overcome this problem has been developed. The criterion is related to operations being performed after the object has been grasped. Some examples for a hand-over operation are presented in the next images. For details see BaierZhang2006. Below the evalutaion of a hand-over criterion of a mug and a bottel is presented.

Bottel Handover1 Bottle Handover2
Mug Handover1 Mug Handover2