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Interactive Robot-Environment Self-Calibration Via Compliant Exploratory Actions

Podshara Chanrungmaneekul, Kejia Ren, Joshua Grace, Aaron Dollar, Kaiyu Hang

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Abstract

Calibrating robots into their workspaces is crucial for manipulation tasks. Existing calibration techniques often rely on sensors external to the robot (cameras, laser scanners, etc.) or specialized tools. This reliance complicates the calibra- tion process and increases the costs and time requirements. Furthermore, the associated setup and measurement proce- dures require significant human intervention, which makes them more challenging to operate. Using the built-in force- torque sensors, which are nowadays a default component in collaborative robots, this work proposes a self-calibration framework where robot-environmental spatial relations are automatically estimated through compliant exploratory actions by the robot itself. The self-calibration approach converges, verifies its own accuracy, and terminates upon completion, autonomously purely through interactive exploration of the environment’s geometries. Extensive experiments validate the effectiveness of our self-calibration approach in accurately establishing the robot-environment spatial relationships without the need for additional sensing equipment or any human intervention.

Index terms

Calibration and Identification