Getting Back on Two Feet: Reliable Standing-up Routines for
a Humanoid Robot
- Author: Jörg Stückler, Johannes Schwenk, and Sven Behnke
- In proceedings of The 9th International Conference on Intelligent
Autonomous Systems (IAS-9), Tokyo, Japan, pp. 676-685, March
2006.
- Abstract:
To make bipedal locomotion robust, it is not sufficient to rely on
postural responses that try to prevent falls, but it is also necessary
to detect falls and to implement appropriate recovery procedures.
This paper describes general methods for a humanoid robot to stand up
from the prone and supine posture. We illustrate the use of these
getting-up routines on the example of our robot Jupp. The proposed
methods require only a limited number of degrees of freedom and observe
common joint-angle limitations. We employed a physics-based robot
simulation to analyze the kinematics and dynamics of getting up. The
standing-up routines have been implemented on the real robot as well.
Tests in our lab and at RoboCup 2005 showed that reliable standing-up
is possible after a fall and that such recovery procedures greatly
improve the overall robustness of bipedal locomotion.
- Paper: IAS9.pdf
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