Haptic Intelligence


2024


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Expert Perception of Teleoperated Social Exercise Robots

Mohan, M., Mat Husin, H., Kuchenbecker, K. J.

In Proceedings of the ACM/IEEE International Conference on Human-Robot Interaction (HRI), pages: 769-773, Boulder, USA, March 2024, Late-Breaking Report (LBR) (5 pages) presented at the IEEE/ACM International Conference on Human-Robot Interaction (HRI) (inproceedings)

Abstract
Social robots could help address the growing issue of physical inactivity by inspiring users to engage in interactive exercise. Nevertheless, the practical implementation of social exercise robots poses substantial challenges, particularly in terms of personalizing their activities to individuals. We propose that motion-capture-based teleoperation could serve as a viable solution to address these needs by enabling experts to record custom motions that could later be played back without their real-time involvement. To gather feedback about this idea, we conducted semi-structured interviews with eight exercise-therapy professionals. Our findings indicate that experts' attitudes toward social exercise robots become more positive when considering the prospect of teleoperation to record and customize robot behaviors.

DOI Project Page [BibTex]

2024

DOI Project Page [BibTex]


Being Neurodivergent in Academia: Autistic and abroad
Being Neurodivergent in Academia: Autistic and abroad

Schulz, A.

eLife, 13, March 2024 (article)

Abstract
An AuDHD researcher recounts the highs and lows of relocating from the United States to Germany for his postdoc.

DOI [BibTex]


{IMU}-Based Kinematics Estimation Accuracy Affects Gait Retraining Using Vibrotactile Cues
IMU-Based Kinematics Estimation Accuracy Affects Gait Retraining Using Vibrotactile Cues

Rokhmanova, N., Pearl, O., Kuchenbecker, K. J., Halilaj, E.

IEEE Transactions on Neural Systems and Rehabilitation Engineering, 32, pages: 1005-1012, February 2024 (article)

Abstract
Wearable sensing using inertial measurement units (IMUs) is enabling portable and customized gait retraining for knee osteoarthritis. However, the vibrotactile feedback that users receive directly depends on the accuracy of IMU-based kinematics. This study investigated how kinematic errors impact an individual's ability to learn a therapeutic gait using vibrotactile cues. Sensor accuracy was computed by comparing the IMU-based foot progression angle to marker-based motion capture, which was used as ground truth. Thirty subjects were randomized into three groups to learn a toe-in gait: one group received vibrotactile feedback during gait retraining in the laboratory, another received feedback outdoors, and the control group received only verbal instruction and proceeded directly to the evaluation condition. All subjects were evaluated on their ability to maintain the learned gait in a new outdoor environment. We found that subjects with high tracking errors exhibited more incorrect responses to vibrotactile cues and slower learning rates than subjects with low tracking errors. Subjects with low tracking errors outperformed the control group in the evaluation condition, whereas those with higher error did not. Errors were correlated with foot size and angle magnitude, which may indicate a non-random algorithmic bias. The accuracy of IMU-based kinematics has a cascading effect on feedback; ignoring this effect could lead researchers or clinicians to erroneously classify a patient as a non-responder if they did not improve after retraining. To use patient and clinician time effectively, future implementation of portable gait retraining will require assessment across a diverse range of patients.

DOI Project Page [BibTex]

DOI Project Page [BibTex]


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How Should Robots Exercise with People? Robot-Mediated Exergames Win with Music, Social Analogues, and Gameplay Clarity

Fitter, N. T., Mohan, M., Preston, R. C., Johnson, M. J., Kuchenbecker, K. J.

Frontiers in Robotics and AI, 10(1155837):1-18, January 2024 (article)

Abstract
The modern worldwide trend toward sedentary behavior comes with significant health risks. An accompanying wave of health technologies has tried to encourage physical activity, but these approaches often yield limited use and retention. Due to their unique ability to serve as both a health-promoting technology and a social peer, we propose robots as a game-changing solution for encouraging physical activity. This article analyzes the eight exergames we previously created for the Rethink Baxter Research Robot in terms of four key components that are grounded in the video-game literature: repetition, pattern matching, music, and social design. We use these four game facets to assess gameplay data from 40 adult users who each experienced the games in balanced random order. In agreement with prior research, our results show that relevant musical cultural references, recognizable social analogues, and gameplay clarity are good strategies for taking an otherwise highly repetitive physical activity and making it engaging and popular among users. Others who study socially assistive robots and rehabilitation robotics can benefit from this work by considering the presented design attributes to generate future hypotheses and by using our eight open-source games to pursue follow-up work on social-physical exercise with robots.

DOI Project Page [BibTex]

DOI Project Page [BibTex]


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Robust Surface Recognition with the Maximum Mean Discrepancy: Degrading Haptic-Auditory Signals through Bandwidth and Noise

Khojasteh, B., Shao, Y., Kuchenbecker, K. J.

IEEE Transactions on Haptics, pages: 1-8, January 2024 (article)

Abstract
Sliding a tool across a surface generates rich sensations that can be analyzed to recognize what is being touched. However, the optimal configuration for capturing these signals is yet unclear. To bridge this gap, we consider haptic-auditory data as a human explores surfaces with different steel tools, including accelerations of the tool and finger, force and torque applied to the surface, and contact sounds. Our classification pipeline uses the maximum mean discrepancy (MMD) to quantify differences in data distributions in a high-dimensional space for inference. With recordings from three hemispherical tool diameters and ten diverse surfaces, we conducted two degradation studies by decreasing sensing bandwidth and increasing added noise. We evaluate the haptic-auditory recognition performance achieved with the MMD to compare newly gathered data to each surface in our known library. The results indicate that acceleration signals alone have great potential for high-accuracy surface recognition and are robust against noise contamination. The optimal accelerometer bandwidth exceeds 1000 Hz, suggesting that useful vibrotactile information extends beyond human perception range. Finally, smaller tool tips generate contact vibrations with better noise robustness. The provided sensing guidelines may enable superhuman performance in portable surface recognition, which could benefit quality control, material documentation, and robotics.

DOI Project Page [BibTex]

2023


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Towards Semi-Automated Pleural Cavity Access for Pneumothorax in Austere Environments

L’Orsa, R., Lama, S., Westwick, D., Sutherland, G., Kuchenbecker, K. J.

Acta Astronautica, 212, pages: 48-53, November 2023 (article)

Abstract
Astronauts are at risk for pneumothorax, a condition where injury or disease introduces air between the chest wall and the lungs (i.e., the pleural cavity). In a worst-case scenario, it can rapidly lead to a fatality if left unmanaged and will require prompt treatment in situ if developed during spaceflight. Chest tube insertion is the definitive treatment for pneumothorax, but it requires a high level of skill and frequent practice for safe use. Physician astronauts may struggle to maintain this skill on medium- and long-duration exploration-class missions, and it is inappropriate for pure just-in-time learning or skill refreshment paradigms. This paper proposes semi-automating tool insertion to reduce the risk of complications in austere environments and describes preliminary experiments providing initial validation of an intelligent prototype system. Specifically, we showcase and analyse motion and force recordings from a sensorized percutaneous access needle inserted repeatedly into an ex vivo tissue phantom, along with relevant physiological data simultaneously recorded from the operator. When coupled with minimal just-in-time training and/or augmented reality guidance, the proposed system may enable non-expert operators to safely perform emergency chest tube insertion without the use of ground resources.

DOI Project Page [BibTex]

2023

DOI Project Page [BibTex]


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Multimodal Multi-User Surface Recognition with the Kernel Two-Sample Test

Khojasteh, B., Solowjow, F., Trimpe, S., Kuchenbecker, K. J.

IEEE Transactions on Automation Science and Engineering, pages: 1-16, August 2023 (article)

Abstract
Machine learning and deep learning have been used extensively to classify physical surfaces through images and time-series contact data. However, these methods rely on human expertise and entail the time-consuming processes of data and parameter tuning. To overcome these challenges, we propose an easily implemented framework that can directly handle heterogeneous data sources for classification tasks. Our data-versus-data approach automatically quantifies distinctive differences in distributions in a high-dimensional space via kernel two-sample testing between two sets extracted from multimodal data (e.g., images, sounds, haptic signals). We demonstrate the effectiveness of our technique by benchmarking against expertly engineered classifiers for visual-audio-haptic surface recognition due to the industrial relevance, difficulty, and competitive baselines of this application; ablation studies confirm the utility of key components of our pipeline. As shown in our open-source code, we achieve 97.2% accuracy on a standard multi-user dataset with 108 surface classes, outperforming the state-of-the-art machine-learning algorithm by 6% on a more difficult version of the task. The fact that our classifier obtains this performance with minimal data processing in the standard algorithm setting reinforces the powerful nature of kernel methods for learning to recognize complex patterns. Note to Practitioners—We demonstrate how to apply the kernel two-sample test to a surface-recognition task, discuss opportunities for improvement, and explain how to use this framework for other classification problems with similar properties. Automating surface recognition could benefit both surface inspection and robot manipulation. Our algorithm quantifies class similarity and therefore outputs an ordered list of similar surfaces. This technique is well suited for quality assurance and documentation of newly received materials or newly manufactured parts. More generally, our automated classification pipeline can handle heterogeneous data sources including images and high-frequency time-series measurements of vibrations, forces and other physical signals. As our approach circumvents the time-consuming process of feature engineering, both experts and non-experts can use it to achieve high-accuracy classification. It is particularly appealing for new problems without existing models and heuristics. In addition to strong theoretical properties, the algorithm is straightforward to use in practice since it requires only kernel evaluations. Its transparent architecture can provide fast insights into the given use case under different sensing combinations without costly optimization. Practitioners can also use our procedure to obtain the minimum data-acquisition time for independent time-series data from new sensor recordings.

DOI Project Page [BibTex]

DOI Project Page [BibTex]


Augmenting Human Policies using Riemannian Metrics for Human-Robot Shared Control
Augmenting Human Policies using Riemannian Metrics for Human-Robot Shared Control

Oh, Y., Passy, J., Mainprice, J.

In Proceedings of the IEEE International Symposium on Robot and Human Interactive Communication (RO-MAN), pages: 1612-1618, Busan, South Korea, August 2023 (inproceedings)

Abstract
We present a shared control framework for teleoperation that combines the human and autonomous robot agents operating in different dimension spaces. The shared control problem is an optimization problem to maximize the human's internal action-value function while guaranteeing that the shared control policy is close to the autonomous robot policy. This results in a state update rule that augments the human controls using the Riemannian metric that emerges from computing the curvature of the robot's value function to account for any cost terms or constraints that the human operator may neglect when operating a redundant manipulator. In our experiments, we apply Linear Quadratic Regulators to locally approximate the robot policy using a single optimized robot trajectory, thereby preventing the need for an optimization step at each time step to determine the optimal policy. We show preliminary results of reach-and-grasp teleoperation tasks with a simulated human policy and a pilot user study using the VR headset and controllers. However, the mixed user preference ratings and quantitative results show that more investigation is required to prove the efficacy of the proposed paradigm.

DOI [BibTex]

DOI [BibTex]


Wear Your Heart on Your Sleeve: Users Prefer Robots with Emotional Reactions to Touch and Ambient Moods
Wear Your Heart on Your Sleeve: Users Prefer Robots with Emotional Reactions to Touch and Ambient Moods

Burns, R. B., Ojo, F., Kuchenbecker, K. J.

In Proceedings of the IEEE International Symposium on Robot and Human Interactive Communication (RO-MAN), pages: 1914-1921, Busan, South Korea, August 2023 (inproceedings)

Abstract
Robots are increasingly being developed as assistants for household, education, therapy, and care settings. Such robots can use adaptive emotional behavior to communicate warmly and effectively with their users and to encourage interest in extended interactions. However, autonomous physical robots often lack a dynamic internal emotional state, instead displaying brief, fixed emotion routines to promote specific user interactions. Furthermore, despite the importance of social touch in human communication, most commercially available robots have limited touch sensing, if any at all. We propose that users' perceptions of a social robotic system will improve when the robot provides emotional responses on both shorter and longer time scales (reactions and moods), based on touch inputs from the user. We evaluated this proposal through an online study in which 51 diverse participants watched nine randomly ordered videos (a three-by-three full-factorial design) of the koala-like robot HERA being touched by a human. Users provided the highest ratings in terms of agency, ambient activity, enjoyability, and touch perceptivity for scenarios in which HERA showed emotional reactions and either neutral or emotional moods in response to social touch gestures. Furthermore, we summarize key qualitative findings about users' preferences for reaction timing, the ability of robot mood to show persisting memory, and perception of neutral behaviors as a curious or self-aware robot.

link (url) DOI Project Page [BibTex]

link (url) DOI Project Page [BibTex]


Minsight: A Fingertip-Sized Vision-Based Tactile Sensor for Robotic Manipulation
Minsight: A Fingertip-Sized Vision-Based Tactile Sensor for Robotic Manipulation

Andrussow, I., Sun, H., Kuchenbecker, K. J., Martius, G.

Advanced Intelligent Systems, 5(8):2300042, August 2023, Inside back cover (article)

Abstract
Intelligent interaction with the physical world requires perceptual abilities beyond vision and hearing; vibrant tactile sensing is essential for autonomous robots to dexterously manipulate unfamiliar objects or safely contact humans. Therefore, robotic manipulators need high-resolution touch sensors that are compact, robust, inexpensive, and efficient. The soft vision-based haptic sensor presented herein is a miniaturized and optimized version of the previously published sensor Insight. Minsight has the size and shape of a human fingertip and uses machine learning methods to output high-resolution maps of 3D contact force vectors at 60 Hz. Experiments confirm its excellent sensing performance, with a mean absolute force error of 0.07 N and contact location error of 0.6 mm across its surface area. Minsight's utility is shown in two robotic tasks on a 3-DoF manipulator. First, closed-loop force control enables the robot to track the movements of a human finger based only on tactile data. Second, the informative value of the sensor output is shown by detecting whether a hard lump is embedded within a soft elastomer with an accuracy of 98%. These findings indicate that Minsight can give robots the detailed fingertip touch sensing needed for dexterous manipulation and physical human–robot interaction.

DOI Project Page [BibTex]


Learning to Estimate Palpation Forces in Robotic Surgery From Visual-Inertial Data
Learning to Estimate Palpation Forces in Robotic Surgery From Visual-Inertial Data

Lee, Y., Husin, H. M., Forte, M., Lee, S., Kuchenbecker, K. J.

IEEE Transactions on Medical Robotics and Bionics, 5(3):496-506, August 2023 (article)

Abstract
Surgeons cannot directly touch the patient's tissue in robot-assisted minimally invasive procedures. Instead, they must palpate using instruments inserted into the body through trocars. This way of operating largely prevents surgeons from using haptic cues to localize visually undetectable structures such as tumors and blood vessels, motivating research on direct and indirect force sensing. We propose an indirect force-sensing method that combines monocular images of the operating field with measurements from IMUs attached externally to the instrument shafts. Our method is thus suitable for various robotic surgery systems as well as laparoscopic surgery. We collected a new dataset using a da Vinci Si robot, a force sensor, and four different phantom tissue samples. The dataset includes 230 one-minute-long recordings of repeated bimanual palpation tasks performed by four lay operators. We evaluated several network architectures and investigated the role of the network inputs. Using the DenseNet vision model and including inertial data best-predicted palpation forces (lowest average root-mean-square error and highest average coefficient of determination). Ablation studies revealed that video frames carry significantly more information than inertial signals. Finally, we demonstrated the model's ability to generalize to unseen tissue and predict shear contact forces.

DOI [BibTex]

DOI [BibTex]


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Naturalistic Vibrotactile Feedback Could Facilitate Telerobotic Assembly on Construction Sites

Gong, Y., Javot, B., Lauer, A. P. R., Sawodny, O., Kuchenbecker, K. J.

In Proceedings of the IEEE World Haptics Conference (WHC), pages: 169-175, Delft, The Netherlands, July 2023 (inproceedings)

Abstract
Telerobotics is regularly used on construction sites to build large structures efficiently. A human operator remotely controls the construction robot under direct visual feedback, but visibility is often poor. Future construction robots that move autonomously will also require operator monitoring. Thus, we designed a wireless haptic feedback system to provide the operator with task-relevant mechanical information from a construction robot in real time. Our AiroTouch system uses an accelerometer to measure the robot end-effector's vibrations and uses off-the-shelf audio equipment and a voice-coil actuator to display them to the user with high fidelity. A study was conducted to evaluate how this type of naturalistic vibration feedback affects the observer's understanding of telerobotic assembly on a real construction site. Seven adults without construction experience observed a mix of manual and autonomous assembly processes both with and without naturalistic vibrotactile feedback. Qualitative analysis of their survey responses and interviews indicated that all participants had positive responses to this technology and believed it would be beneficial for construction activities.

DOI Project Page [BibTex]

DOI Project Page [BibTex]


A Toolkit for Expanding Sustainability Engineering Utilizing Foundations of the Engineering for One Planet Initiative
A Toolkit for Expanding Sustainability Engineering Utilizing Foundations of the Engineering for One Planet Initiative

Schulz, A., Anderson, C. D., Cooper, C., Roberts, D., Loyo, J., Lewis, K., Kumar, S., Rolf, J., Marulanda, N. A. G.

In Proceedings of the American Society of Engineering Education (ASEE), Baltimore, USA, June 2023, Andrew Schulz, Cindy Cooper, Cindy Anderson contributed equally. (inproceedings)

Abstract
Recently, there has been a significant push to prepare all engineers with skills in sustainability, motivated by industry needs, accreditation requirements, and international efforts such as the National Science Foundation’s 10 Big Ideas and Grand Challenges and the United Nations’ Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). This paper discusses a new toolkit to enable broad dissemination of vetted tools to help engineering faculty members teach sustainability using resources from the Engineering for One Planet (EOP) initiative. This toolkit is to be used as a mechanism to engage a diversity of stakeholders to use their voices, experiences, and connections to share the need for national curricular change in engineering education widely. This toolkit can foster the integration of sustainability-focused learning outcomes into engineering courses and programs. This is particularly important for graduating engineers at this crucial time when we collectively face a convergence of national- and global-scale planetary crises that professional engineers will directly and indirectly impact. Catalyzed by The Lemelson Foundation and VentureWell, the EOP initiative provides teaching tools, grants, and support for the EOP Network —a volunteer action network— comprising diverse stakeholders collectively seeking to transform engineering education to equip all engineers with the understanding, knowledge, skills, and mindsets to ensure their work contributes to a healthy world. The EOP Framework, a fundamental resource of the initiative, provides a curated and vetted list of ABET-aligned sustainability-focused student learning outcomes, including core and advanced. It covers social and environmental sustainability topics and essential professional skills such as communication, teamwork, and critical thinking. It was designed as a practical implementation tool — rather than a research framework — to help educators embed sustainability concepts and tools into engineering courses and programs at all levels. The Lemelson Foundation has provided a range of grants to support curricular transformation efforts using the EOP Framework. With support from The Lemelson Foundation, ASEE launched an EOP Mini-Grant Program in 2022 to engender curricular changes using the EOP Framework. The EOP Network is working to extend the reach of the Framework across the ASEE community beyond initial pilot programs by implementing an EOP Toolkit for EOP Network members and other stakeholders to use at their home institutions, conferences, and informative workshops. This article describes the rationale for creating the EOP Toolkit, the development process, content examples, and use scenarios.

[BibTex]

[BibTex]


Utilizing Online and Open-Source Machine Learning Toolkits to Leverage the Future of Sustainable Engineering
Utilizing Online and Open-Source Machine Learning Toolkits to Leverage the Future of Sustainable Engineering

Schulz, A., Stathatos, S., Shriver, C., Moore, R.

In Proceedings of the American Society of Engineering Education (ASEE), Baltimore, USA, June 2023, Andrew Schulz and Suzanne Stathatos are co-first authors. (inproceedings)

Abstract
Recently, there has been a national push to use machine learning (ML) and artificial intelligence (AI) to advance engineering techniques in all disciplines ranging from advanced fracture mechanics in materials science to soil and water quality testing in the civil and environmental engineering fields. Using AI, specifically machine learning, engineers can automate and decrease the processing or human labeling time while maintaining statistical repeatability via trained models and sensors. Edge Impulse has designed an open-source TinyML-enabled Arduino education tool kit for engineering disciplines. This paper discusses the various applications and approaches engineering educators have taken to utilize ML toolkits in the classroom. We provide in-depth implementation guides and associated learning outcomes focused on the Environmental Engineering Classroom. We discuss five specific examples of four standard Environmental Engineering courses for freshman and junior-level engineering. There are currently few programs in the nation that utilize machine learning toolkits to prepare the next generation of ML and AI-educated engineers for industry and academic careers. This paper will guide educators to design and implement ML/AI into engineering curricula (without a specific AI or ML focus within the course) using simple, cheap, and open-source tools and technological aid from an online platform in collaboration with Edge Impulse.

DOI [BibTex]

DOI [BibTex]


Generating Clear Vibrotactile Cues with a Magnet Embedded in a Soft Finger Sheath
Generating Clear Vibrotactile Cues with a Magnet Embedded in a Soft Finger Sheath

Gertler, I., Serhat, G., Kuchenbecker, K. J.

Soft Robotics, 10(3):624-635, June 2023 (article)

Abstract
Haptic displays act on the user's body to stimulate the sense of touch and enrich applications from gaming and computer-aided design to rehabilitation and remote surgery. However, when crafted from typical rigid robotic components, they tend to be heavy, bulky, and expensive, while sleeker designs often struggle to create clear haptic cues. This article introduces a lightweight wearable silicone finger sheath that can deliver salient and rich vibrotactile cues using electromagnetic actuation. We fabricate the sheath on a ferromagnetic mandrel with a process based on dip molding, a robust fabrication method that is rarely used in soft robotics but is suitable for commercial production. A miniature rare-earth magnet embedded within the silicone layers at the center of the finger pad is driven to vibrate by the application of alternating current to a nearby air-coil. Experiments are conducted to determine the amplitude of the magnetic force and the frequency response function for the displacement amplitude of the magnet perpendicular to the skin. In addition, high-fidelity finite element analyses of the finger wearing the device are performed to investigate the trends observed in the measurements. The experimental and simulated results show consistent dynamic behavior from 10 to 1000 Hz, with the displacement decreasing after about 300 Hz. These results match the detection threshold profile obtained in a psychophysical study performed by 17 users, where more current was needed only at the highest frequency. A cue identification experiment and a demonstration in virtual reality validate the feasibility of this approach to fingertip haptics.

DOI Project Page [BibTex]


In the Arms of a Robot: Designing Autonomous Hugging Robots with Intra-Hug Gestures
In the Arms of a Robot: Designing Autonomous Hugging Robots with Intra-Hug Gestures

Block, A. E., Seifi, H., Hilliges, O., Gassert, R., Kuchenbecker, K. J.

ACM Transactions on Human-Robot Interaction, 12(2):1-49, June 2023, Special Issue on Designing the Robot Body: Critical Perspectives on Affective Embodied Interaction (article)

Abstract
Hugs are complex affective interactions that often include gestures like squeezes. We present six new guidelines for designing interactive hugging robots, which we validate through two studies with our custom robot. To achieve autonomy, we investigated robot responses to four human intra-hug gestures: holding, rubbing, patting, and squeezing. Thirty-two users each exchanged and rated sixteen hugs with an experimenter-controlled HuggieBot 2.0. The robot's inflated torso's microphone and pressure sensor collected data of the subjects' demonstrations that were used to develop a perceptual algorithm that classifies user actions with 88% accuracy. Users enjoyed robot squeezes, regardless of their performed action, they valued variety in the robot response, and they appreciated robot-initiated intra-hug gestures. From average user ratings, we created a probabilistic behavior algorithm that chooses robot responses in real time. We implemented improvements to the robot platform to create HuggieBot 3.0 and then validated its gesture perception system and behavior algorithm with sixteen users. The robot's responses and proactive gestures were greatly enjoyed. Users found the robot more natural, enjoyable, and intelligent in the last phase of the experiment than in the first. After the study, they felt more understood by the robot and thought robots were nicer to hug.

DOI Project Page [BibTex]

DOI Project Page [BibTex]


Reconstructing Signing Avatars from Video Using Linguistic Priors
Reconstructing Signing Avatars from Video Using Linguistic Priors

Forte, M., Kulits, P., Huang, C. P., Choutas, V., Tzionas, D., Kuchenbecker, K. J., Black, M. J.

In IEEE/CVF Conf. on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition (CVPR), pages: 12791-12801, CVPR 2023, June 2023 (inproceedings)

Abstract
Sign language (SL) is the primary method of communication for the 70 million Deaf people around the world. Video dictionaries of isolated signs are a core SL learning tool. Replacing these with 3D avatars can aid learning and enable AR/VR applications, improving access to technology and online media. However, little work has attempted to estimate expressive 3D avatars from SL video; occlusion, noise, and motion blur make this task difficult. We address this by introducing novel linguistic priors that are universally applicable to SL and provide constraints on 3D hand pose that help resolve ambiguities within isolated signs. Our method, SGNify, captures fine-grained hand pose, facial expression, and body movement fully automatically from in-the-wild monocular SL videos. We evaluate SGNify quantitatively by using a commercial motion-capture system to compute 3D avatars synchronized with monocular video. SGNify outperforms state-of-the-art 3D body-pose- and shape-estimation methods on SL videos. A perceptual study shows that SGNify's 3D reconstructions are significantly more comprehensible and natural than those of previous methods and are on par with the source videos. Code and data are available at sgnify.is.tue.mpg.de.

pdf arXiv project code DOI [BibTex]

pdf arXiv project code DOI [BibTex]


Haptify: A Measurement-Based Benchmarking System for Grounded Force-Feedback Devices
Haptify: A Measurement-Based Benchmarking System for Grounded Force-Feedback Devices

Fazlollahi, F., Kuchenbecker, K. J.

IEEE Transactions on Robotics, 39(2):1622-1636, April 2023 (article)

Abstract
Grounded force-feedback (GFF) devices are an established and diverse class of haptic technology based on robotic arms. However, the number of designs and how they are specified make comparing devices difficult. We thus present Haptify, a benchmarking system that can thoroughly, fairly, and noninvasively evaluate GFF haptic devices. The user holds the instrumented device end-effector and moves it through a series of passive and active experiments. Haptify records the interaction between the hand, device, and ground with a seven-camera optical motion-capture system, a 60-cm-square custom force plate, and a customized sensing end-effector. We demonstrate six key ways to assess GFF device performance: workspace shape, global free-space forces, global free-space vibrations, local dynamic forces and torques, frictionless surface rendering, and stiffness rendering. We then use Haptify to benchmark two commercial haptic devices. With a smaller workspace than the 3D Systems Touch, the more expensive Touch X outputs smaller free-space forces and vibrations, smaller and more predictable dynamic forces and torques, and higher-quality renderings of a frictionless surface and high stiffness.

DOI Project Page [BibTex]


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Effects of Automated Skill Assessment on Robotic Surgery Training

Brown, J. D., Kuchenbecker, K. J.

The International Journal of Medical Robotics and Computer Assisted Surgery, 19(2):e2492, April 2023 (article)

Abstract
Background: Several automated skill-assessment approaches have been proposed for robotic surgery, but their utility is not well understood. This article investigates the effects of one machine-learning-based skill-assessment approach on psychomotor skill development in robotic surgery training. Methods: N=29 trainees (medical students and residents) with no robotic surgery experience performed five trials of inanimate peg transfer with an Intuitive Surgical da Vinci Standard robot. Half of the participants received no post-trial feedback. The other half received automatically calculated scores from five Global Evaluative Assessment of Robotic Skill (GEARS) domains post-trial. Results: There were no significant differences between the groups regarding overall improvement or skill improvement rate. However, participants who received post-trial feedback rated their overall performance improvement significantly lower than participants who did not receive feedback. Conclusions: These findings indicate that automated skill evaluation systems might improve trainee selfawareness but not accelerate early-stage psychomotor skill development in robotic surgery training.

DOI Project Page [BibTex]

DOI Project Page [BibTex]


ForageFeeder: a low-cost open source feeder for randomly distributed food
ForageFeeder: a low-cost open source feeder for randomly distributed food

Jadali, N., Zhang, M., Schulz, A., Meyerchick, J., Schulz, A.

HardwareX, March 2023 (article)

Abstract
Automated feeders have long fed mice, livestock, and poultry, but are incapable of feeding zoo animals such as gorillas. In captivity, gorillas eat cut vegetables and fruits in pieces too large to be dispensed by automated feeders. Consequently, captive gorillas are fed manually at set times and locations, keeping them from the exercise and enrichment that accompanies natural foraging. We designed and built ForageFeeder, an automated gorilla feeder that spreads food at random intervals throughout the day. ForageFeeder is an open source and easy to manufacture and modify device, making the feeder more accessible for zoos. The design presented here reduces manual labor for zoo staff and may be a useful tool for studies of animal ethology.

DOI [BibTex]

DOI [BibTex]


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The S-BAN: Insights into the Perception of Shape-Changing Haptic Interfaces via Virtual Pedestrian Navigation

Spiers, A. J., Young, E., Kuchenbecker, K. J.

ACM Transactions on Computer-Human Interaction, 30(1):1-31, March 2023 (article)

Abstract
Screen-based pedestrian navigation assistance can be distracting or inaccessible to users. Shape-changing haptic interfaces can overcome these concerns. The S-BAN is a new handheld haptic interface that utilizes a parallel kinematic structure to deliver 2-DOF spatial information over a continuous workspace, with a form factor suited to integration with other travel aids. The ability to pivot, extend and retract its body opens possibilities and questions around spatial data representation. We present a static study to understand user perception of absolute pose and relative motion for two spatial mappings, showing highest sensitivity to relative motions in the cardinal directions. We then present an embodied navigation experiment in virtual reality. User motion efficiency when guided by the S-BAN was statistically equivalent to using a vision-based tool (a smartphone proxy). Although haptic trials were slower than visual trials, participants' heads were more elevated with the S-BAN, allowing greater visual focus on the environment.

DOI Project Page [BibTex]


Elephant trunks use an adaptable prehensile grip
Elephant trunks use an adaptable prehensile grip

Schulz, A., Reidenberg, J., Wu, J. N., Tang, C. Y., Seleb, B., Mancebo, J., Elgart, N., Hu, D.

Bioinspiration and Biomimetics, 18, February 2023 (article)

Abstract
Elephants have long been observed to grip objects with their trunk, but little is known about how they adjust their strategy for different weights. In this study, we challenge a female African elephant at Zoo Atlanta to lift 20–60 kg barbell weights with only its trunk. We measure the trunk’s shape and wrinkle geometry from a frozen elephant trunk at the Smithsonian. We observe several strategies employed to accommodate heavier weights, including accelerating less, orienting the trunk vertically, and wrapping the barbell with a greater trunk length. Mathematical models show that increasing barbell weights are associated with constant trunk tensile force and an increasing barbell-wrapping surface area due to the trunk’s wrinkles. Our findings may inspire the design of more adaptable soft robotic grippers that can improve grip using surface morphology such as wrinkles.

DOI [BibTex]

DOI [BibTex]


Drying dynamics of pellet feces
Drying dynamics of pellet feces

Magondu, B., Lee, A., Schulz, A., Buchelli, G., Meng, M., Kaminski, C., Yang, P., Carver, S., Hu, D.

Soft Matter, 19, pages: 723-732, January 2023 (article)

Abstract
Pellet feces are generated by a number of animals important to science or agriculture, including mice, rats, goats, and wombats. Understanding the factors that lead to fecal shape may provide a better understanding of animal health and diet. In this combined experimental and theoretical study, we test the hypothesis that pellet feces are formed by drying processes in the intestine. Inspirational to our work is the formation of hexagonal columnar jointings in cooling lava beds, in which the width L of the hexagon scales as L ∼ J−1 where J is the heat flux from the bed. Across 22 species of mammals, we report a transition from cylindrical to pellet feces if fecal water content drops below 0.65. Using a mathematical model that accounts for water intake rate and intestinal dimensions, we show pellet feces length L scales as L ∼ J−2.08 where J is the flux of water absorbed by the intestines. We build a mimic of the mammalian intestine using a corn starch cake drying in an open trough, finding that corn starch pellet length scales with water flux−0.46. The range of exponents does not permit us to conclude that formation of columnar jointings is similar to the formation of pellet feces. Nevertheless, the methods and physical picture shown here may be of use to physicians and veterinarians interested in using feces length as a marker of intestinal health.

DOI [BibTex]

DOI [BibTex]


The Utility of Synthetic Reflexes and Haptic Feedback for Upper-Limb Prostheses in a Dexterous Task Without Direct Vision
The Utility of Synthetic Reflexes and Haptic Feedback for Upper-Limb Prostheses in a Dexterous Task Without Direct Vision

Thomas, N., Fazlollahi, F., Kuchenbecker, K. J., Brown, J. D.

IEEE Transactions on Neural Systems and Rehabilitation Engineering, 31, pages: 169-179, January 2023 (article)

Abstract
Individuals who use myoelectric upper-limb prostheses often rely heavily on vision to complete their daily activities. They thus struggle in situations where vision is overloaded, such as multitasking, or unavailable, such as poor lighting conditions. Able-bodied individuals can easily accomplish such tasks due to tactile reflexes and haptic sensation guiding their upper-limb motor coordination. Based on these principles, we developed and tested two novel prosthesis systems that incorporate autonomous controllers and provide the user with touch-location feedback through either vibration or distributed pressure. These capabilities were made possible by installing a custom contact-location sensor on the fingers of a commercial prosthetic hand, along with a custom pressure sensor on the thumb. We compared the performance of the two systems against a standard myoelectric prosthesis and a myoelectric prosthesis with only autonomous controllers in a difficult reach-to-pick-and-place task conducted without direct vision. Results from 40 able-bodied participants in this between-subjects study indicated that vibrotactile feedback combined with synthetic reflexes proved significantly more advantageous than the standard prosthesis in several of the task milestones. In addition, vibrotactile feedback and synthetic reflexes improved grasp placement compared to only synthetic reflexes or pressure feedback combined with synthetic reflexes. These results indicate that autonomous controllers and haptic feedback together facilitate success in dexterous tasks without vision, and that the type of haptic display matters.

DOI Project Page [BibTex]

DOI Project Page [BibTex]


Predicting the Force Map of an {ERT}-Based Tactile Sensor Using Simulation and Deep Networks
Predicting the Force Map of an ERT-Based Tactile Sensor Using Simulation and Deep Networks

Lee, H., Sun, H., Park, H., Serhat, G., Javot, B., Martius, G., Kuchenbecker, K. J.

IEEE Transactions on Automation Science and Engineering, 20(1):425-439, January 2023 (article)

Abstract
Electrical resistance tomography (ERT) can be used to create large-scale soft tactile sensors that are flexible and robust. Good performance requires a fast and accurate mapping from the sensor's sequential voltage measurements to the distribution of force across its surface. However, particularly with multiple contacts, this task is challenging for both previously developed approaches: physics-based modeling and end-to-end data-driven learning. Some promising results were recently achieved using sim-to-real transfer learning, but estimating multiple contact locations and accurate contact forces remains difficult because simulations tend to be less accurate with a high number of contact locations and/or high force. This paper introduces a modular hybrid method that combines simulation data synthesized from an electromechanical finite element model with real measurements collected from a new ERT-based tactile sensor. We use about 290,000 simulated and 90,000 real measurements to train two deep neural networks: the first (Transfer-Net) captures the inevitable gap between simulation and reality, and the second (Recon-Net) reconstructs contact forces from voltage measurements. The number of contacts, contact locations, force magnitudes, and contact diameters are evaluated for a manually collected multi-contact dataset of 150 measurements. Our modular pipeline's results outperform predictions by both a physics-based model and end-to-end learning.

DOI Project Page [BibTex]


Bioinspired Robots Can Foster Nature Conservation
Bioinspired Robots Can Foster Nature Conservation

Chellapurath, M., Khandelwal, P., Schulz, A. K.

Frontiers in Robotics and AI, 10, 2023 (article) Accepted

Abstract
We live in a time of unprecedented scientific and human progress while being increasingly aware of its negative impacts on our planet's health. Aerial, terrestrial, and aquatic ecosystems have significantly declined putting us on course to a sixth mass extinction event. Nonetheless, the advances made in science, engineering, and technology have given us the opportunity to reverse some of our ecosystem damage and preserve them through conservation efforts around the world. However, current conservation efforts are primarily human led with assistance from conventional robotic systems which limit their scope and effectiveness, along with negatively impacting the surroundings. In this perspective, we present the field of bioinspired robotics to develop versatile agents for future conservation efforts that can operate in the natural environment while minimizing the disturbance/impact to its inhabitants and the environment's natural state. We provide an operational and environmental framework that should be considered while developing bioinspired robots for conservation. These considerations go beyond addressing the challenges of human-led conservation efforts and leverage the advancements in the field of materials, intelligence, and energy harvesting, to make bioinspired robots move and sense like animals. In doing so, it makes bioinspired robots an attractive, non-invasive, sustainable, and effective conservation tool for exploration, data collection, intervention, and maintenance. Finally, we discuss the development of bioinspired robots in the context of collaboration, practicality, and applicability that would ensure their further development and widespread use to protect and preserve our natural world.

[BibTex]

[BibTex]


Conservation Tools: The Next Generation of Engineering--Biology Collaborations
Conservation Tools: The Next Generation of Engineering–Biology Collaborations

Schulz, A., Shriver, C., Stathatos, S., Seleb, B., Weigel, E., Chang, Y., Bhamla, M. S., Hu, D., III, J. R. M.

Royal Society Interface, 2023, Andrew Schulz, Cassie Shriver, Suzanne Stathatos, and Benjamin Seleb are co-first authors. (article)

Abstract
The recent increase in public and academic interest in preserving biodiversity has led to the growth of the field of conservation technology. This field involves designing and constructing tools that utilize technology to aid in wildlife conservation. In this review, we present five case studies and infer a framework for designing conservation tools based on human-wildlife interaction. Successful conservation tools range in complexity from cat collars to machine learning and game theory methodologies and do not require technological expertise to contribute to conservation tool creation. We aim to introduce researchers to conservation technology and provide references for guiding the next generation of conservation technologists. Conservation technology has the potential to benefit biodiversity and have broader impacts on fields such as sustainability and environmental protection. By using innovative technologies to address conservation challenges, we can find more effective and efficient solutions to protect and preserve our planet's resources.

DOI [BibTex]

DOI [BibTex]


A Year at the Forefront of Hydrostat Motion
A Year at the Forefront of Hydrostat Motion

Schulz, A., Schneider, N., Zhang, M., Singal, K.

Biology Open, 2023, N. Schneider, M. Zhang, and K. Singal all contributed equally on this manuscript. (article)

Abstract
Currently, in the field of interdisciplinary work in biology, there has been a significant push by the soft robotic community to understand the motion and maneuverability of hydrostats. This review seeks to expand the muscular hydrostat hypothesis toward new structures, including plants, and introduce innovative techniques to the hydrostat community on new modeling, simulating, mimicking, and observing hydrostat motion methods. These methods range from ideas of kirigami, origami, and knitting for mimic creation to utilizing reinforcement learning for control of bio-inspired soft robotic systems. It is now being understood through modeling that different mechanisms can inhibit traditional hydrostat motion, such as skin, nostrils, or sheathed layered muscle walls. The impact of this review will highlight these mechanisms, including asymmetries, and discuss the critical next steps toward understanding their motion and how species with hydrostat structures control such complex motions, highlighting work from January 2022 to December 2022.

DOI [BibTex]

DOI [BibTex]

2022


A Guide for Successful Research Collaborations between Zoos and Universities
A Guide for Successful Research Collaborations between Zoos and Universities

Schulz, A., Shriver, C., Aubuchon, C., Weigel, E., Kolar, M., III, J. M., Hu, D.

Integrative and Comparitive Biology, 62, pages: 1174-1185, November 2022 (article)

Abstract
Zoos offer university researchers unique opportunities to study animals that would be difficult or impractical to work with in the wild. However, the different cultures, goals, and priorities of zoos and universities can be a source of conflict. How can researchers build mutually beneficial collaborations with their local zoo? In this article, we present the results of a survey of 117 personnel from 59 zoos around the United States, where we highlight best practices spanning all phases of collaboration, from planning to working alongside the zoo and maintaining contact afterward. Collaborations were hindered if university personnel did not appreciate the zoo staff’s time constraints as well as the differences between zoo animals and laboratory animals. We include a vision for how to improve zoo collaborations, along with a history of our own decade-long collaborations with Zoo Atlanta. A central theme is the long-term establishment of trust between institutions.

DOI [BibTex]

2022

DOI [BibTex]


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Learning to Feel Textures: Predicting Perceptual Similarities from Unconstrained Finger-Surface Interactions

Richardson, B. A., Vardar, Y., Wallraven, C., Kuchenbecker, K. J.

IEEE Transactions on Haptics, 15(4):705-717, October 2022, Benjamin A. Richardson and Yasemin Vardar contributed equally to this publication. (article)

Abstract
Whenever we touch a surface with our fingers, we perceive distinct tactile properties that are based on the underlying dynamics of the interaction. However, little is known about how the brain aggregates the sensory information from these dynamics to form abstract representations of textures. Earlier studies in surface perception all used general surface descriptors measured in controlled conditions instead of considering the unique dynamics of specific interactions, reducing the comprehensiveness and interpretability of the results. Here, we present an interpretable modeling method that predicts the perceptual similarity of surfaces by comparing probability distributions of features calculated from short time windows of specific physical signals (finger motion, contact force, fingernail acceleration) elicited during unconstrained finger-surface interactions. The results show that our method can predict the similarity judgments of individual participants with a maximum Spearman's correlation of 0.7. Furthermore, we found evidence that different participants weight interaction features differently when judging surface similarity. Our findings provide new perspectives on human texture perception during active touch, and our approach could benefit haptic surface assessment, robotic tactile perception, and haptic rendering.

DOI Project Page [BibTex]

DOI Project Page [BibTex]


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Towards Semi-Automated Pleural Cavity Access for Pneumothorax in Austere Environments

L’Orsa, R., Lama, S., Westwick, D., Sutherland, G., Kuchenbecker, K. J.

In Proceedings of the International Astronautical Congress (IAC), pages: 1-7, Paris, France, September 2022 (inproceedings)

Abstract
Pneumothorax, a condition where injury or disease introduces air between the chest wall and lungs, can impede lung function and lead to respiratory failure and/or obstructive shock. Chest trauma from dynamic loads, hypobaric exposure from extravehicular activity, and pulmonary inflammation from celestial dust exposures could potentially cause pneumothoraces during spaceflight with or without exacerbation from deconditioning. On Earth, emergent cases are treated with chest tube insertion (tube thoracostomy, TT) when available, or needle decompression (ND) when not (i.e., pre-hospital). However, ND has high failure rates (up to 94%), and TT has high complication rates (up to 37.9%), especially when performed by inexperienced or intermittent operators. Thus neither procedure is ideal for a pure just-in-time training or skill refreshment approach, and both may require adjuncts for safe inclusion in Level of Care IV (e.g., short duration lunar orbit) or V (e.g., Mars transit) missions. Insertional complications are of particular concern since they cause inadvertent tissue damage that, while surgically repairable in an operating room, could result in (preventable) fatality in a spacecraft or other isolated, confined, or extreme (ICE) environments. Tools must be positioned and oriented correctly to avoid accidental insertion into critical structures, and they must be inserted no further than the thin membrane lining the inside of the rib cage (i.e., the parietal pleura). Operators identify pleural puncture via loss-of-resistance sensations on the tool during advancement, but experienced surgeons anecdotally describe a wide range of membrane characteristics: robust tissues require significant force to perforate, while fragile tissues deliver little-to-no haptic sensation when pierced. Both extremes can lead to tool overshoot and may be representative of astronaut tissues at the beginning (healthy) and end (deconditioned) of long duration exploration class missions. Given uncertainty surrounding physician astronaut selection criteria, skill retention, and tissue condition, an adjunct for improved insertion accuracy would be of value. We describe experiments conducted with an intelligent prototype sensorized system aimed at semi-automating tool insertion into the pleural cavity. The assembly would integrate with an in-mission medical system and could be tailored to fully complement an autonomous medical response agent. When coupled with minimal just-in-time training, it has the potential to bestow expert pleural access skills on non-expert operators without the use of ground resources, in both emergent and elective treatment scenarios.

Project Page [BibTex]

Project Page [BibTex]


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Comparison of Human Trimanual Performance Between Independent and Dependent Multiple-Limb Training Modes

Allemang–Trivalle, A., Eden, J., Huang, Y., Ivanova, E., Burdet, E.

In Proceedings of the IEEE RAS/EMBS International Conference for Biomedical Robotics and Biomechatronics (BioRob), Seoul, Korea, August 2022 (inproceedings)

Abstract
Human movement augmentation with a third robotic hand can extend human capability allowing a single user to perform three-hand tasks that would typically require cooperation with other people. However, as trimanual control is not typical in everyday activities, it is still unknown how to train people to acquire this capability efficiently. We conducted an experimental study to evaluate two different trimanual training modes with 24 subjects. This investigated how the different modes impact the transfer of learning of the acquired trimanual capability to another task. Two groups of twelve subjects were each trained in virtual reality for five weeks using either independent or dependent trimanual task repetitions. The training was evaluated by comparing performance before and after training in a gamified trimanual task. The results show that both groups of subjects improved their trimanual capabilities after training. However, this improvement appeared independent of training scheme.

DOI [BibTex]

DOI [BibTex]


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Wrist-Squeezing Force Feedback Improves Accuracy and Speed in Robotic Surgery Training

Machaca, S., Cao, E., Chi, A., Adrales, G., Kuchenbecker, K. J., Brown, J. D.

In Proceedings of the IEEE RAS/EMBS International Conference for Biomedical Robotics and Biomechatronics (BioRob), pages: 1-8, Seoul, Korea, August 2022 (inproceedings)

Abstract
Current robotic minimally invasive surgery (RMIS) platforms provide surgeons with no haptic feedback of the robot's physical interactions. This limitation forces surgeons to rely heavily on visual feedback and can make it challenging for surgical trainees to manipulate tissue gently. Prior research has demonstrated that haptic feedback can increase task accuracy in RMIS training. However, it remains unclear whether these improvements represent a fundamental improvement in skill, or if they simply stem from re-prioritizing accuracy over task completion time. In this study, we provide haptic feedback of the force applied by the surgical instruments using custom wrist-squeezing devices. We hypothesize that individuals receiving haptic feedback will increase accuracy (produce less force) while increasing their task completion time, compared to a control group receiving no haptic feedback. To test this hypothesis, N=21 novice participants were asked to repeatedly complete a ring rollercoaster surgical training task as quickly as possible. Results show that participants receiving haptic feedback apply significantly less force (0.67 N) than the control group, and they complete the task no faster or slower than the control group after twelve repetitions. Furthermore, participants in the feedback group decreased their task completion times significantly faster (7.68 %) than participants in the control group (5.26 %). This form of haptic feedback, therefore, has the potential to help trainees improve their technical accuracy without compromising speed.

DOI Project Page [BibTex]

DOI Project Page [BibTex]


Skin wrinkles and folds enable asymmetric stretch in the elephant trunk
Skin wrinkles and folds enable asymmetric stretch in the elephant trunk

Schulz, A., Boyle, M., Boyle, C., Sordilla, S., Rincon, C., Hooper, S., Aubuchon, C., Reidenberg, J., Higgins, C., Hu, D.

Proceedings of the National Academices of Science , 119, August 2022 (article)

Abstract
The elephant’s trunk is multifunctional: It must be flexible to wrap around vegetation, but tough to knock down trees and resist attack. How can one appendage satisfy both constraints? In this combined experimental and theoretical study, we challenged African elephants to reach far-away objects with only horizontal extensions of their trunk. Surprisingly, the trunk does not extend uniformly, but instead exhibits a dorsal “joint” that stretches 15% more than the corresponding ventral section. Using material testing with the skin of a deceased elephant, we show that the asymmetry is due in part to patterns of the skin. The dorsal skin is folded and 15% more pliable than the wrinkled ventral skin. Skin folds protect the dorsal section and stretch to facilitate downward wrapping, the most common gripping style when picking up items. The elephant’s skin is also sufficiently stiff to influence its mechanics: At the joint, the skin requires 13 times more energy to stretch than the corresponding length of muscle. The use of wrinkles and folds to modulate stiffness may provide a valuable concept for both biology and soft robotics.

DOI [BibTex]

DOI [BibTex]


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How Long Does It Take to Learn Trimanual Coordination?

Allemang–Trivalle, A., Eden, J., Ivanova, E., Huang, Y., Burdet, E.

In Proceedings of the IEEE International Conference on Robot and Human Interactive Communication (RO-MAN), pages: 211-216, Naples, Italy, August 2022 (inproceedings)

Abstract
Supernumerary robotic limbs can act as intelligent prostheses or augment the motion of healthy people to achieve actions which are not possible with only two natural hands. However, as trimanual control is not typical in everyday activities, it is still unknown how different training could influence its acquisition. We conducted an experimental study to evaluate the impact of different forms of trimanual action on training. Two groups of twelve subjects were each trained in virtual reality for five weeks using either a three independent goals task or one dependent goal task. The success of their training was then evaluated by comparing their task performance and motion characteristics between sessions. The results show that subjects dramatically improved their trimanual task performance as a result of training. However, while they showed improved motion efficiency and reduced workload for tasks with multiple independent goals with practice, no such improvement was observed when they trained with the one coordinated goal task.

DOI [BibTex]

DOI [BibTex]


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Maximizing buckling load of elliptical composite cylinders using lamination parameters

Guo, Y., Serhat, G., Pérez, M. G., Knippers, J.

Engineering Structures, 262, pages: 114342, July 2022 (article)

Abstract
Structural members made of fiber-reinforced polymers (FRP) attract increasing attention in the development of novel architectural systems that challenge the standard design methodologies. Cylindrical surfaces constitute one of the typical geometric sets obtained with the FRP component fabrication. This paper explores the influences of two geometric parameters on the buckling performance of elliptical cylinders: inverse slenderness (ratio of minimum diameter to height) and eccentricity (ratio of radii along semi-axes). The overall stiffness properties are defined using lamination parameters. This analysis method eliminates the dependency of optimal solutions on the initial assumptions regarding the laminate configuration, which needs to be explicitly described in multi-layer modeling. Finite element analyses are utilized to compute buckling loads of the cylinders under axial compression force and bi-axial bending moments. The optimal lamination parameters and buckling stresses are determined for various parameters, and the lamination parameters corresponding to the optimal and simple [±45°] angle-ply design points are presented in the lamination parameter plane via Miki's diagram. The results reveal the level of performance that can be achieved by a specific geometry and provide guidelines for the optimal design of elliptical laminated cylinders against buckling.

DOI [BibTex]

DOI [BibTex]


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The Scaling of Olfaction: Moths have Relatively More Olfactory Surface Area than Mammals

Mohebbi, N., Schulz, A., Spencer, T., Pos, K., Mandel, A., Casas, J., Hu, D.

Integrative and Comparitive Biology, 62(1), July 2022, Nina Mohebbi and Andrew Schulz contributed equally. (article)

Abstract
Body size affects nearly every aspect of locomotion and sensing, but little is known of its influence on olfaction. One reason for this missing link is that olfaction differs fundamentally from vision and hearing in that molecules are advected by fluid before depositing on olfactory sensors. This critical role of fluid flow in olfaction leads to complexities and trade-offs. For example, a greater density of hairs and sensory neurons may lead to greater collection, but can also lead to reduced flow through hairs and additional weight and drag due to a larger olfactory organ. In this study, we report the surface area and sensory neuron density in olfactory organs of 95 species of moths and mammals. We find that approximately 12–14% of an olfactory system’s surface area is devoted to chemosensors. Furthermore, total olfactory surface area and olfactory sensing surface area scale with body mass to the 0.49 and 0.38 powers, respectively, indicating that moths have a higher proportion of olfactory surface area than mammals. The density of olfactory neurons appears to be near the limit, at 10,000 to 100,000 neurons per square mm across both insects and mammals. This study demonstrates the need for future work detailing how the scaling of olfaction and other senses vary across taxa.

DOI [BibTex]

DOI [BibTex]


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Contact Evolution of Dry and Hydrated Fingertips at Initial Touch

Serhat, G., Vardar, Y., Kuchenbecker, K. J.

PLOS ONE, 17(7):e0269722, July 2022, Gokhan Serhat and Yasemin Vardar contributed equally to this publication. (article)

Abstract
Pressing the fingertips into surfaces causes skin deformations that enable humans to grip objects and sense their physical properties. This process involves intricate finger geometry, non-uniform tissue properties, and moisture, complicating the underlying contact mechanics. Here we explore the initial contact evolution of dry and hydrated fingers to isolate the roles of governing physical factors. Two participants gradually pressed an index finger on a glass surface under three moisture conditions: dry, water-hydrated, and glycerin-hydrated. Gross and real contact area were optically measured over time, revealing that glycerin hydration produced strikingly higher real contact area, while gross contact area was similar for all conditions. To elucidate the causes for this phenomenon, we investigated the combined effects of tissue elasticity, skin-surface friction, and fingerprint ridges on contact area using simulation. Our analyses show the dominant influence of elastic modulus over friction and an unusual contact phenomenon, which we call friction-induced hinging.

DOI Project Page [BibTex]

DOI Project Page [BibTex]


Perceptual Space of Algorithms for Three-to-One Dimensional Reduction of Realistic Vibrations
Perceptual Space of Algorithms for Three-to-One Dimensional Reduction of Realistic Vibrations

Lee, H., Tombak, G. I., Park, G., Kuchenbecker, K. J.

IEEE Transactions on Haptics, 15(3):521-534, July 2022 (article)

Abstract
Haptics researchers often endeavor to deliver realistic vibrotactile feedback through broad-bandwidth actuators; however, these actuators typically generate only single-axis vibrations, not 3D vibrations like those that occur in natural tool-mediated interactions. Several three-to-one (321) dimensional reduction algorithms have thus been developed to combine 3D vibrations into 1D vibrations. Surprisingly, the perceptual quality of 321-converted vibrations has never been comprehensively compared to rendering of the original 3D signals. In this study, we develop a multi-dimensional vibration rendering system using a magnetic levitation haptic interface. We verify the system's ability to generate realistic 3D vibrations recorded in both tapping and dragging interactions with four surfaces. We then conduct a study with 15 participants to measure the perceived dissimilarities between five 321 algorithms (SAZ, SUM, VM, DFT, PCA) and the original recordings. The resulting perceptual space is investigated with multiple regression and Procrustes analysis to unveil the relationship between the physical and perceptual properties of 321-converted vibrations. Surprisingly, we found that participants perceptually discriminated the original 3D vibrations from all tested 1D versions. Overall, our results indicate that spectral, temporal, and directional attributes may all contribute to the perceived similarities of vibration signals.

DOI Project Page [BibTex]


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A Foundational Design Experience in Conservation Technology: A Multi-Disciplinary Approach to meeting Sustainable Development Goals

Schulz, A., Shriver, C., Seleb, B., Greiner, C., Hu, D., Moore, R., Zhang, M., Jadali, N., Patka, A.

Proceedings of the American Society of Engineering Education, pages: 1-12, Minneapolis, USA, June 2022, Award for best paper (conference)

Abstract
Project-based courses allow students to apply techniques they have learned in their undergraduate engineering curriculum to real-world problems. While many students have demonstrated interest in working on humanitarian projects that address the United Nations’ Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), these projects typically require longer timelines than a single semester capstone course will allow. To encourage student participation in achieving the SDGs, we have created an interdisciplinary course that allows sophomore through senior-level undergraduate students to engage in utilizing human-wildlife centered design to work on projects that prevent extinction and promote healthy human-wildlife co-habitation. This field, known as Conservation Technology (CT), helps students 1) understand the complexities of solutions to the SDGs and the need for diverse perspectives, 2) find and apply international conservation guidelines, 3) develop teamwork and leadership skills by working on interdisciplinary teams, and 4) evaluate and assess conservation technology projects for multiple stakeholders and in the context of the SDGs. Students may take this course for several sequential semesters, partnering with more senior and junior students, allowing for long-term engagement in sustainability solutions. In the first half of the semester, we leverage more traditional pedagogical approaches, including formative assessments and in-class lectures on conservation, technology, and sustainability solutions. In the second half of the semester, we utilize peer, instructor, and expert reviews of the projects students work on to help them excel at successful and equitable conservation technology interventions. Through 9 formal interviews conducted with students, we discovered themes that students identified as most critical for engaging in conservation technology initiatives. These themes include 1) perspective given to students through in-person, active learning using the Dilemma, Issue, Question approach, 2) Independent learning of conservation technology background and theory during the beginning of the course, and 3) Hands-on learning and project-focused experiences in CT. To leverage engineers’ engagement in the SDGs, students needed half a semester of background information to allow for an adequate understanding of the complexities of humanitarian aid projects. This paper, discusses the course structure that will help leverage Sustainable Development Goals into engineering curricula and use Conservation Technology projects in the course as case studies for interdisciplinary learning.

link (url) [BibTex]

link (url) [BibTex]


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Multi-objective optimization of composite sandwich panels using lamination parameters and spectral Chebyshev method

Seyyedrahmani, F., Shahabad, P. K., Serhat, G., Bediz, B., Basdogan, I.

Composite Structures, 289(115417), June 2022 (article)

Abstract
Composite materials are widely used in various industries because of their distinct properties. Hybridization is an efficient way of designing composite panels to decrease the cost and/or weight while maintaining stiffness properties. In this study, an accurate and efficient framework is developed to optimize laminated sandwich panels composed of high-stiffness face sheets and low-stiffness core. The stiffness properties of face sheets and core are represented using lamination parameters. The governing equations are derived following first-order shear deformation theory and solved using the spectral Chebyshev approach. In multi-objective optimization problems, genetic algorithm is used to determine Pareto-optimal solutions for fundamental frequency, frequency gap, buckling load, and cost metrics. In these analyses, optimal lamination parameters and thickness are found for face-sheets and core of sandwich panels, and the results are presented as 2D and 3D Pareto-optimal design points. When the individual performance metrics lead to different optimum points, a scattering behavior is observed in the 3D Pareto sets whose boundaries are defined by the 2-objective Pareto fronts. The results provide insights into the design requirements for improving the dynamic and load-carrying behavior of sandwich laminates while minimizing the cost that presents the usability of the presented approach in the multi-objective optimization.

DOI [BibTex]

DOI [BibTex]


Normal and Tangential Forces Combine to Convey Contact Pressure During Dynamic Tactile Stimulation
Normal and Tangential Forces Combine to Convey Contact Pressure During Dynamic Tactile Stimulation

Gueorguiev, D., Lambert, J., Thonnard, J., Kuchenbecker, K. J.

Scientific Reports, 12, pages: 8215, May 2022 (article)

Abstract
Humans need to accurately process the contact forces that arise as they perform everyday haptic interactions such as sliding the fingers along a surface to feel for bumps, sticky regions, or other irregularities. Several different mechanisms are possible for how the forces on the skin could be represented and integrated in such interactions. In this study, we used a force-controlled robotic platform and simultaneous ultrasonic modulation of the finger-surface friction to independently manipulate the normal and tangential forces during passive haptic stimulation by a flat surface. To assess whether the contact pressure on their finger had briefly increased or decreased during individual trials in this broad stimulus set, participants did not rely solely on either the normal force or the tangential force. Instead, they integrated tactile cues induced by both components. Support-vector-machine analysis classified physical trial data with up to 75% accuracy and suggested a linear perceptual mechanism. In addition, the change in the amplitude of the force vector predicted participants' responses better than the change of the coefficient of dynamic friction, suggesting that intensive tactile cues are meaningful in this task. These results provide novel insights about how normal and tangential forces shape the perception of tactile contact.

DOI Project Page [BibTex]


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Predicting Knee Adduction Moment Response to Gait Retraining with Minimal Clinical Data

Rokhmanova, N., Kuchenbecker, K. J., Shull, P. B., Ferber, R., Halilaj, E.

PLOS Computational Biology, 18(5):e1009500, May 2022 (article)

Abstract
Knee osteoarthritis is a progressive disease mediated by high joint loads. Foot progression angle modifications that reduce the knee adduction moment (KAM), a surrogate of knee loading, have demonstrated efficacy in alleviating pain and improving function. Although changes to the foot progression angle are overall beneficial, KAM reductions are not consistent across patients. Moreover, customized interventions are time-consuming and require instrumentation not commonly available in the clinic. We present a regression model that uses minimal clinical data-a set of six features easily obtained in the clinic-to predict the extent of first peak KAM reduction after toe-in gait retraining. For such a model to generalize, the training data must be large and variable. Given the lack of large public datasets that contain different gaits for the same patient, we generated this dataset synthetically. Insights learned from a ground-truth dataset with both baseline and toe-in gait trials (N = 12) enabled the creation of a large (N = 138) synthetic dataset for training the predictive model. On a test set of data collected by a separate research group (N = 15), the first peak KAM reduction was predicted with a mean absolute error of 0.134% body weight * height (%BW*HT). This error is smaller than the standard deviation of the first peak KAM during baseline walking averaged across test subjects (0.306%BW*HT). This work demonstrates the feasibility of training predictive models with synthetic data and provides clinicians with a new tool to predict the outcome of patient-specific gait retraining without requiring gait lab instrumentation.

DOI Project Page [BibTex]

DOI Project Page [BibTex]


Larger Skin-Surface Contact Through a Fingertip Wearable Improves Roughness Perception
Larger Skin-Surface Contact Through a Fingertip Wearable Improves Roughness Perception

Gueorguiev, D., Javot, B., Spiers, A., Kuchenbecker, K. J.

In Haptics: Science, Technology, Applications, pages: 171-179, Lecture Notes in Computer Science, 13235, (Editors: Seifi, Hasti and Kappers, Astrid M. L. and Schneider, Oliver and Drewing, Knut and Pacchierotti, Claudio and Abbasimoshaei, Alireza and Huisman, Gijs and Kern, Thorsten A.), Springer, Cham, 13th International Conference on Human Haptic Sensing and Touch Enabled Computer Applications (EuroHaptics 2022), May 2022 (inproceedings)

Abstract
With the aim of creating wearable haptic interfaces that allow the performance of everyday tasks, we explore how differently designed fingertip wearables change the sensory threshold for tactile roughness perception. Study participants performed the same two-alternative forced-choice roughness task with a bare finger and wearing three flexible fingertip covers: two with a square opening (64 and 36 mm2, respectively) and the third with no opening. The results showed that adding the large opening improved the 75% JND by a factor of 2 times compared to the fully covered finger: the higher the skin-surface contact area, the better the roughness perception. Overall, the results show that even partial skin-surface contact through a fingertip wearable improves roughness perception, which opens design opportunities for haptic wearables that preserve natural touch.

DOI [BibTex]

DOI [BibTex]


Design of Interactive Augmented Reality Functions for Robotic Surgery and Evaluation in Dry-Lab Lymphadenectomy
Design of Interactive Augmented Reality Functions for Robotic Surgery and Evaluation in Dry-Lab Lymphadenectomy

Forte, M., Gourishetti, R., Javot, B., Engler, T., Gomez, E. D., Kuchenbecker, K. J.

The International Journal of Medical Robotics and Computer Assisted Surgery, 18(2):e2351, April 2022 (article)

Abstract
Augmented reality (AR) has been widely researched for use in healthcare. Prior AR for robot-assisted minimally invasive surgery has mainly focused on superimposing preoperative 3D images onto patient anatomy. This paper presents alternative interactive AR tools for robotic surgery. We designed, built, and evaluated four voice-controlled functions: viewing a live video of the operating room, viewing two-dimensional preoperative images, measuring 3D distances, and warning about out-of-view instruments. This low-cost system was developed on a da Vinci Si, and it can be integrated into surgical robots equipped with a stereo camera and a stereo viewer. Eight experienced surgeons performed dry-lab lymphadenectomies and reported that the functions improved the procedure. They particularly appreciated the possibility of accessing the patient's medical records on demand, measuring distances intraoperatively, and interacting with the functions using voice commands. The positive evaluations garnered by these alternative AR functions and interaction methods provide support for further exploration.

DOI Project Page [BibTex]

DOI Project Page [BibTex]


Endowing a {NAO} Robot with Practical Social-Touch Perception
Endowing a NAO Robot with Practical Social-Touch Perception

Burns, R. B., Lee, H., Seifi, H., Faulkner, R., Kuchenbecker, K. J.

Frontiers in Robotics and AI, 9, pages: 840335, April 2022 (article)

Abstract
Social touch is essential to everyday interactions, but current socially assistive robots have limited touch-perception capabilities. Rather than build entirely new robotic systems, we propose to augment existing rigid-bodied robots with an external touch-perception system. This practical approach can enable researchers and caregivers to continue to use robotic technology they have already purchased and learned about, but with a myriad of new social-touch interactions possible. This paper presents a low-cost, easy-to-build, soft tactile-perception system that we created for the NAO robot, as well as participants' feedback on touching this system. We installed four of our fabric-and-foam-based resistive sensors on the curved surfaces of a NAO's left arm, including its hand, lower arm, upper arm, and shoulder. Fifteen adults then performed five types of affective touch-communication gestures (hitting, poking, squeezing, stroking, and tickling) at two force intensities (gentle and energetic) on the four sensor locations; we share this dataset of four time-varying resistances, our sensor patterns, and a characterization of the sensors' physical performance. After training, a gesture-classification algorithm based on a random forest identified the correct combined touch gesture and force intensity on windows of held-out test data with an average accuracy of 74.1%, which is more than eight times better than chance. Participants rated the sensor-equipped arm as pleasant to touch and liked the robot's presence significantly more after touch interactions. Our promising results show that this type of tactile-perception system can detect necessary social-touch communication cues from users, can be tailored to a variety of robot body parts, and can provide HRI researchers with the tools needed to implement social touch in their own systems.

DOI Project Page [BibTex]


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Toward The Un’s Sustainable Development Goals (sdgs): Conservation Technology For Design Teaching & Learning

Schulz, A., Seleb, B., Shriver, C., Hu, D., Moore, R.

pages: 1-9, Charlotte, USA, March 2022 (conference)

Abstract
Interdisciplinary capstone team projects have provided a more diverse array of student experiences and have been shown to improve a team’s innovation, analysis, and communication. The UN’s 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) provide aspirational, human-centered design opportunities for applying engineering practices to real-world technology interventions that aid in programs from public health to wildlife conservation. In this sophomore-level design course, we focused on climate change, the impact of life on the sea, and the impact of life on the land through the lens of conservation technology. Conservation Technology is a relatively new field focusing on the creation of technologies to promote and safeguard sustainable human-wildlife interactions. In this manuscript, we describe the framework for teaching a Conservation Technology project-based capstone engineering course and present observations of monodisciplinary and interdisciplinary team practices. When working in a non-interdisciplinary team, engineers tended to focus only on the design deliverables and missed challenges imposed by policy, biology, and computational requirements. These three challenges are nearly always present in conservation technology interventions. In contrast, the interdisciplinary team was able to better identify the diverse challenges associated with conservation technology intervention. This work in progress paper focuses on the development of an organized curriculum to teach conservation technology to first- and second-year engineers to allow them to work towards more sustainable engineering practices. Universities are working to inject the SDGs into the engineering curriculum, and we believe Conservation Technology may be an ideal fit for combining the engineering design process with the scientific method to discover new types of possible failures in design and create innovative solutions for a sustainable future.

link (url) [BibTex]

link (url) [BibTex]


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Robot, Pass Me the Tool: Handle Visibility Facilitates Task-Oriented Handovers

Ortenzi, V., Filipovica, M., Abdlkarim, D., Pardi, T., Takahashi, C., Wing, A. M., Luca, M. D., Kuchenbecker, K. J.

In Proceedings of the ACM/IEEE International Conference on Human-Robot Interaction (HRI), pages: 256-264, March 2022, Valerio Ortenzi and Maija Filipovica contributed equally to this publication. (inproceedings)

Abstract
A human handing over an object modulates their grasp and movements to accommodate their partner's capabilities, which greatly increases the likelihood of a successful transfer. State-of-the-art robot behavior lacks this level of user understanding, resulting in interactions that force the human partner to shoulder the burden of adaptation. This paper investigates how visual occlusion of the object being passed affects the subjective perception and quantitative performance of the human receiver. We performed an experiment in virtual reality where seventeen participants were tasked with repeatedly reaching to take a tool from the hand of a robot; each of the three tested objects (hammer, screwdriver, scissors) was presented in a wide variety of poses. We carefully analysed the user's hand and head motions, the time to grasp the object, and the chosen grasp location, as well as participants' ratings of the grasp they just performed. Results show that initial visibility of the handle significantly increases the reported holdability and immediate usability of a tool. Furthermore, a robot that offers objects so that their handles are more occluded forces the receiver to spend more time in planning and executing the grasp and also lowers the probability that the tool will be grasped by the handle. Together these findings indicate that robots can more effectively support their human work partners by increasing the visibility of the intended grasp location of objects being passed.

DOI Project Page [BibTex]

DOI Project Page [BibTex]


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Adaptive Optimal Measurement Algorithm for ERT-Based Large-Area Tactile Sensors

Park, K., Lee, H., Kuchenbecker, K. J., Kim, J.

IEEE/ASME Transactions on Mechatronics, 27(1):304-314, February 2022 (article)

Abstract
Electrical resistance tomography (ERT) is an inferential imaging technique that has shown promising results for enabling large-area tactile sensors constructed from a piezoresistive sheet. The performance of such sensors is improved by increasing the number of electrodes, but the number of measurements and the computational cost also increase. In this article, we propose a new measurement algorithm for ERT-based tactile sensors: it adaptively changes the measurement pattern to be optimal for the present external stimulus. Regions of normal pressure are first detected by a base measurement pattern that maximizes the distinguishability of local conductivity changes. When a new contact is detected, a set of local patterns is selectively recruited near the pressed region to acquire more detailed information. For fast and parallel execution, the proposed algorithm is implemented with a field-programmable gate array. It is validated through indentation experiments on an ERT-based sensor that has 32 electrodes. The optimized base pattern of 100 measurements enabled a frame rate five times faster than before. Transmitting only detected contact events reduced the idle data rate to 0.5% of its original value. The pattern adapted to new contacts with a latency of only 80 μs and an accuracy of 99.5%, enabling efficient, high-quality real-time reconstruction of complex multicontact conditions.

DOI Project Page [BibTex]

DOI Project Page [BibTex]


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A design methodology for fiber layup optimization of filament wound structural components

Guo, Y., Pérez, M. G., Serhat, G., Knippers, J.

Structures, 38, pages: 1125-1136, February 2022 (article)

Abstract
The applications of fiber-reinforced polymer (FRP) composites extend rapidly along with the development of new manufacturing techniques. However, due to the complexities introduced by the material and fabrication processes, the application of conventional structural design methods for construction members has been significantly challenging. This paper presents an alternative methodology to find optimum fiber layups for a given tube-shape geometry via a graphical optimization strategy based on structural performance requirements. The proposed technique employs simplified shell element models based on classical lamination theory (CLT) to avoid explicit fiber modeling in the FEA simulations. Lamination parameters are utilized to generate the reduced stiffness matrices for continuous multi-layer FRP lamination. The fiber layup of the component is retrieved from the optimal lamination parameters that maximize the structural performance. The case study results demonstrate that the developed method provides compact solutions, linking the structural design requirements with optimal fiber orientations and volumetric proportions. In addition, the determined solutions can be interpreted directly by the winding fabrication settings.

DOI [BibTex]

DOI [BibTex]