Steven Jens Jorgensen, Michael Lanighan, S. Bertrand, Andrew Watson, Joseph S. Altemus, R. Askew, Lyndon B. Bridgwater, Beau B. Domingue, Charlie Kendrick, Jason Lee, Mark Paterson, Jairo Sanchez, P. Beeson, Seth Gee, Stephen Hart, A. H. Quispe, Robert J. Griffin, Inho Lee, Stephen McCrory, L. Sentis, J. Pratt, Joshua S. Mehling
{"title":"部署NASA的瓦尔基里类人机器人用于IED响应:初步方法和评估总结","authors":"Steven Jens Jorgensen, Michael Lanighan, S. Bertrand, Andrew Watson, Joseph S. Altemus, R. Askew, Lyndon B. Bridgwater, Beau B. Domingue, Charlie Kendrick, Jason Lee, Mark Paterson, Jairo Sanchez, P. Beeson, Seth Gee, Stephen Hart, A. H. Quispe, Robert J. Griffin, Inho Lee, Stephen McCrory, L. Sentis, J. Pratt, Joshua S. Mehling","doi":"10.1109/Humanoids43949.2019.9034993","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"As part of a feasibility study, this paper shows the NASA Valkyrie humanoid robot performing an end-to-end improvised explosive device (IED) response task. To demonstrate and evaluate robot capabilities, sub-tasks highlight different locomotion, manipulation, and perception requirements: traversing uneven terrain, passing through a narrow passageway, opening a car door, retrieving a suspected IED, and securing the IED in a total containment vessel (TCV). For each sub-task, a description of the technical approach and the hidden challenges that were overcome during development are presented. The discussion of results, which explicitly includes existing limitations, is aimed at motivating continued research and development to enable practical deployment of humanoid robots for IED response. For instance, the data shows that operator pauses contribute to 50% of the total completion time, which implies that further work is needed on user interfaces for increasing task completion efficiency.**Disclaimer: Trade names and trademarks are used in this report for identification only. Their usage does not constitute an official endorsement, either expressed or implied, by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration","PeriodicalId":404758,"journal":{"name":"2019 IEEE-RAS 19th International Conference on Humanoid Robots (Humanoids)","volume":"9 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2019-10-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"12","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Deploying the NASA Valkyrie Humanoid for IED Response: An Initial Approach and Evaluation Summary\",\"authors\":\"Steven Jens Jorgensen, Michael Lanighan, S. Bertrand, Andrew Watson, Joseph S. Altemus, R. Askew, Lyndon B. Bridgwater, Beau B. Domingue, Charlie Kendrick, Jason Lee, Mark Paterson, Jairo Sanchez, P. Beeson, Seth Gee, Stephen Hart, A. H. Quispe, Robert J. Griffin, Inho Lee, Stephen McCrory, L. Sentis, J. Pratt, Joshua S. 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For instance, the data shows that operator pauses contribute to 50% of the total completion time, which implies that further work is needed on user interfaces for increasing task completion efficiency.**Disclaimer: Trade names and trademarks are used in this report for identification only. 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Deploying the NASA Valkyrie Humanoid for IED Response: An Initial Approach and Evaluation Summary
As part of a feasibility study, this paper shows the NASA Valkyrie humanoid robot performing an end-to-end improvised explosive device (IED) response task. To demonstrate and evaluate robot capabilities, sub-tasks highlight different locomotion, manipulation, and perception requirements: traversing uneven terrain, passing through a narrow passageway, opening a car door, retrieving a suspected IED, and securing the IED in a total containment vessel (TCV). For each sub-task, a description of the technical approach and the hidden challenges that were overcome during development are presented. The discussion of results, which explicitly includes existing limitations, is aimed at motivating continued research and development to enable practical deployment of humanoid robots for IED response. For instance, the data shows that operator pauses contribute to 50% of the total completion time, which implies that further work is needed on user interfaces for increasing task completion efficiency.**Disclaimer: Trade names and trademarks are used in this report for identification only. Their usage does not constitute an official endorsement, either expressed or implied, by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration