Robot
with 'human soul' explores remotely
17:23
21 November 2006
NewScientist.com news service
Tom Simonite
Technology that lets a
human "inhabit" the body of a distant robot for remote exploration is
being tested in Germany.
The
robot sits on top of a wheeled platform and has an extendable arm that it uses
to manipulate objects. An operator moves the robot around by simply walking or
using a foot pedal and can see out of twin cameras positioned on the robot's head
after donning a head-mounted display.
The
controller's wrist is also connected to a touch sensitive (haptic) interface that
controls the robot's arm. Furthermore, a wearable glove provides control over
a three-fingered hand at the end of the robot's arm.
Force-feedback
gives the operator a sense of the robot's physical interactions with its surroundings
by providing resistance to the user if the robot is pushing up against
or grasping something, for example. Meanwhile, microphones relay surrounding noises
to a pair of headphones
Dangerous
places
"Being
able to control a mobile robot would be useful for places too dangerous for humans
to go, for example to investigate a suspicious suitcase at an airport," says
Anjelika Peer, who is developing the system at Munich University, in Germany,
with colleagues Ulrich Unterhinninghofen and Martin Buss.
At
the moment, other "tele-operation" systems are stationary at both ends
of the connection. But by summer 2007, the team hopes to have a robot with two
arms.
"Having
the feeling of moving around helps the user feel immersed in the remote environment,"
explains Peer. "With a joystick or pedal they can't easily tell if the robot
has moved 10 or 20 metres."
More
complex tele-operation systems that involve wearing an exoskeleton to control
a humanoid robot are also under development. But these are not yet sophisticated
enough to both move around and manipulate objects, Peer says, and are also restrictive
and tiring to use.
Robot
teams
The
researchers plan to try collaborating using several of the robots. "They
will have to fix a piece of tubing broken in two," Peer says. "One will
hold the pieces together while the other seals them back together."
Ken
Young, a roboticist at Warwick University, in the UK, says the system has promise.
"It looked great in an office," he told New Scientist, "And you
could easily make the wheels capable of moving over cross-country terrain."
But
the complexity involved with operating the robots could be a problem, Young believes:
"It looks good when the researchers drive it, but it might not be so accessible
to everyone."