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M. Aiple

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Doctoral thesis (2021) - M. Aiple
This thesis explores possibilities and constraints in performing dynamic tasks through teleoperated robots. Teleoperation is commonly used to execute tasks by a human operator guiding a robot remotely through means of a teleoperation system. The teleoperation system bidirectionally mirrors the motions and forces between a handle device held by the operator and a robotic tool device interacting with the environment. While the use of teleoperation to execute slow motions precisely and with appropriate forces has been researched intensively, teleoperation for dynamic motions occurring in explosive movement tasks like throwing, hammering, shaking, and jolting is not yet sufficiently understood. Nevertheless, these motions also belong to the portfolio of motions that non-disabled humans routinely carry out. A deeper understanding of teleoperation for explosive movement tasks could be especially helpful for applications of field robotics, like disaster recovery scenarios, future planetary exploration missions, and other teleoperation applications in unknown environments where some degree of improvisation is useful. ...
Journal article (2018) - Manuel Aiple, Jan Smisek, André Schiele
Series elastic actuators (SEAs) are interesting for usage in harsh environments as they are more robust than rigid actuators. This paper shows how SEAs can be used in teleoperation to increase output velocity in dynamic tasks. A first experiment is presented that tested human ability to achieve higher hammerhead velocities with a flexible hammer than with a rigid hammer, and to evaluate the influence of the resonance frequency. In this experiment, 13 participants executed a hammering task in direct manipulation using flexible hammers in four conditions with resonance frequencies of 3.0 Hz to 9.9 Hz and one condition with a rigid hammer. Then, a second experiment is presented that tested the ability of 32 participants to reproduce the findings of the first experiment in teleoperated manipulation with different feedback conditions: with visual and force feedback, without visual feedback, without force feedback, and with a communication delay of 40 ms. The results indicate that humans can exploit the mechanical resonance of a flexible system to at least double the output velocity without combined force and vision feedback. This is an unexpected result, allowing the design of simpler and more robust teleoperators for dynamic tasks. ...
Conference paper (2017) - M. Aiple, A. Schiele
Variable stiffness actuators undergo lower peak force in contacts compared to their rigid counterparts, and are thus safer for human-robot interaction. Furthermore, they can store energy in their elastic element and can release it later to achieve human-like dynamic movements. However, it is not clear how to integrate them in teleoperator systems so that they can be controlled intuitively by a human. We performed an experiment to study human use of elastic tools to determine how a teleoperator system with an elastic slave would need to be designed. For this, we had 13 untrained participants hammer with an elastic tool under different stiffness conditions, asking them to try to find the best timing for a backward-forward swing motion in order to achieve the strongest impact. We found that the participants generally executed the task efficiently after a few trials and they converged to very similar solutions. The stiffness influenced the performance slightly, a stiffness between 2.3 Nm/rad and 4.1 Nm/rad showing the best results. We conclude that humans intuitively know how to efficiently use elastic tools for hammering type tasks. This could facilitate the control of teleoperator systems with elastic slave manipulators for tasks requiring explosive movements like hammering. ...

A system for bilateral control experiments from space to ground via geosynchronous satellites

Conference paper (2016) - Andre Schiele, T. Krüger, Stefan Kimmer, Manuel Aiple, Joao Pinto Rebelo, Jan Smisek, Emiel den Exter, E. Mattheson, A. Hernandez, F. van der Hulst
This paper introduces a new Learning from Demonstration (LfD)-based method that makes usage of robot effector forces and torques recorded during expert demonstrations, to generate force-based haptic guidance reference trajectories on-line, that are intended to be used during haptic shared control for additional operator 'guidance'. Derived haptic guidance trajectories are superimposed to master-device inputs and feedback forces within a bilateral control experiment, to assist an operator by the guidance during peg-in-hole insertion. We show that 96 peg-in-hole expert demonstrations were sufficient to obtain a good model of the task, which was used on-line to generate haptic guidance trajectories in real-time with a 1kHz sampling rate. ...

Preliminary results from the first stiffness JND identification experiment in space

Conference paper (2016) - André Schiele, Manuel Aiple, T Krueger, Frank Van Der Hulst, Stefan Kimmer, Jan Smisek, Emiel Den Exter
On July 28th 2014, 23:47 UTC, the European Space Agency launched the Haptics-1 Kit to the International Space Station (ISS) on its last Automated Transfer Vehicle ATV-5. The Kit reached the station two weeks later, marking the first haptic master device to enter the ISS. The first force-feedback and human perceptual motor performance tests started to take place on December 30th 2014, and are the first of their kind in the history of spaceflight. Three astronauts participated in the Haptics-1 experiment until November 2015, allowing the investigation of the effects of microgravity on various psycho-motor performance metrics related with the usage of haptic feedback. Experiments are conducted following full adaptation to the space environment (after 3 months in space). This paper introduces the Haptics-1 experiment and associated hardware. Detailed experimental results are reported from a first stiffness just noticeable difference (JND) experimental study in space, carried out on the ISS and pre-flight on ground with 3 astronauts. The first findings from the experiment show no major alterations in-flight, when compared to on-ground data, if the manipulandum is secured in flight against a sufficiently stiff reference structure. ...
Conference paper (2013) - Manuel Aiple, Andre Schiele
The CyberGrasp™ is a well known dataglove-exoskeleton device combination that allows to render haptic feedback to the human fingers. Its design, however, restricts its usability for teleoperation through a limited control bandwidth and position sensor resolution. Therefore the system is restricted to low achievable contact stiffness and feedback gain magnitudes in haptic rendering. Moreover, the system prohibits simple adaption of its controller implementation. ...