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Robotics (cs.RO)

Wed, 17 May 2023

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1.Automatic Traffic Scenario Conversion from OpenSCENARIO to CommonRoad

Authors:Yuanfei Lin, Michael Ratzel, Matthias Althoff

Abstract: Scenarios are a crucial element for developing, testing, and verifying autonomous driving systems. However, open-source scenarios are often formulated using different terminologies. This limits their usage across different applications as many scenario representation formats are not directly compatible with each other. To address this problem, we present the first open-source converter from the OpenSCENARIO format to the CommonRoad format, which are two of the most popular scenario formats used in autonomous driving. Our converter employs a simulation tool to execute the dynamic elements defined by OpenSCENARIO. The converter is available at commonroad.in.tum.de and we demonstrate its usefulness by converting publicly available scenarios in the OpenSCENARIO format and evaluating them using CommonRoad tools.

2.Large-Scale Package Manipulation via Learned Metrics of Pick Success

Authors:Shuai Li, Azarakhsh Keipour, Kevin Jamieson, Nicolas Hudson, Charles Swan, Kostas Bekris

Abstract: Automating warehouse operations can reduce logistics overhead costs, ultimately driving down the final price for consumers, increasing the speed of delivery, and enhancing the resiliency to workforce fluctuations. The past few years have seen increased interest in automating such repeated tasks but mostly in controlled settings. Tasks such as picking objects from unstructured, cluttered piles have only recently become robust enough for large-scale deployment with minimal human intervention. This paper demonstrates a large-scale package manipulation from unstructured piles in Amazon Robotics' Robot Induction (Robin) fleet, which utilizes a pick success predictor trained on real production data. Specifically, the system was trained on over 394K picks. It is used for singulating up to 5~million packages per day and has manipulated over 200~million packages during this paper's evaluation period. The developed learned pick quality measure ranks various pick alternatives in real-time and prioritizes the most promising ones for execution. The pick success predictor aims to estimate from prior experience the success probability of a desired pick by the deployed industrial robotic arms in cluttered scenes containing deformable and rigid objects with partially known properties. It is a shallow machine learning model, which allows us to evaluate which features are most important for the prediction. An online pick ranker leverages the learned success predictor to prioritize the most promising picks for the robotic arm, which are then assessed for collision avoidance. This learned ranking process is demonstrated to overcome the limitations and outperform the performance of manually engineered and heuristic alternatives. To the best of the authors' knowledge, this paper presents the first large-scale deployment of learned pick quality estimation methods in a real production system.

3.Inertial-based Navigation by Polynomial Optimization: Inertial-Magnetic Attitude Estimation

Authors:Maoran Zhu, Yuanxin Wu

Abstract: Inertial-based navigation refers to the navigation methods or systems that have inertial information or sensors as the core part and integrate a spectrum of other kinds of sensors for enhanced performance. Through a series of papers, the authors attempt to explore information blending of inertial-based navigation by a polynomial optimization method. The basic idea is to model rigid motions as finite-order polynomials and then attacks the involved navigation problems by optimally solving their coefficients, taking into considerations the constraints posed by inertial sensors and others. In the current paper, a continuous-time attitude estimation approach is proposed, which transforms the attitude estimation into a constant parameter determination problem by the polynomial optimization. Specifically, the continuous attitude is first approximated by a Chebyshev polynomial, of which the unknown Chebyshev coefficients are determined by minimizing the weighted residuals of initial conditions, dynamics and measurements. We apply the derived estimator to the attitude estimation with the magnetic and inertial sensors. Simulation and field tests show that the estimator has much better stability and faster convergence than the traditional extended Kalman filter does, especially in the challenging large initial state error scenarios.

4.Motion Planning (In)feasibility Detection using a Prior Roadmap via Path and Cut Search

Authors:Yoonchang Sung, Peter Stone

Abstract: Motion planning seeks a collision-free path in a configuration space (C-space), representing all possible robot configurations in the environment. As it is challenging to construct a C-space explicitly for a high-dimensional robot, we generally build a graph structure called a roadmap, a discrete approximation of a complex continuous C-space, to reason about connectivity. Checking collision-free connectivity in the roadmap requires expensive edge-evaluation computations, and thus, reducing the number of evaluations has become a significant research objective. However, in practice, we often face infeasible problems: those in which there is no collision-free path in the roadmap between the start and the goal locations. Existing studies often overlook the possibility of infeasibility, becoming highly inefficient by performing many edge evaluations. In this work, we address this oversight in scenarios where a prior roadmap is available; that is, the edges of the roadmap contain the probability of being a collision-free edge learned from past experience. To this end, we propose an algorithm called iterative path and cut finding (IPC) that iteratively searches for a path and a cut in a prior roadmap to detect infeasibility while reducing expensive edge evaluations as much as possible. We further improve the efficiency of IPC by introducing a second algorithm, iterative decomposition and path and cut finding (IDPC), that leverages the fact that cut-finding algorithms partition the roadmap into smaller subgraphs. We analyze the theoretical properties of IPC and IDPC, such as completeness and computational complexity, and evaluate their performance in terms of completion time and the number of edge evaluations in large-scale simulations.