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Topic Name: Robo-forklift keeps humans out of harm's way : Could allow military to handle supplies without risk to people
Category: Mechanical
Research persons: Matthew Walter
Location: Cambridge, United States
Details
Researchers in MIT's Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory
(CSAIL) are working on a better way to handle supplies in a war zone: a
semi-autonomous forklift that can be directed by people safely away from the
dangers of the site.
Currently, when supplies arrive at military outposts in war zones such as
Iraq, people driving forklifts unload the pallets and put them into storage, and
later load them onto trucks to take the material to where it's needed. These
forklift operators must often scramble for cover, slowing the work and putting
them at risk.
When completed, the new robotic device will provide a safer way to handle
pallet-loaded supplies of everything from truck tires to water containers and
construction materials, says Matt Walter, a CSAIL postdoctoral researcher with a
lead role in the project. The device is designed to operate outdoors on uneven
terrain such as gravel or packed earth.
In Iraq, it has not been uncommon for workers to "have to abandon the
forklift three or four times a day because they come under fire," Walter says.
"A lot of the work could be automated," thus alleviating people's exposure to
danger, "but it's a very difficult task."
HEAVY LIFTING IN HOSTILE TERRITORY:
The forklift is designed to operate autonomously with high-level direction
from a human supervisor who could be physically nearby, or safely ensconced in a
remote bunker. In an initial training phase, the forklift learns the basic
layout of the storage depot facility, such as where the reception area ism where
incoming supply trucks arrive with a load of pallets ready to be stored, and
where the storage areas are for those pallets to be deposited. The forklift can
then be commanded to transport pallets from one place to another within the
depot.
Determining which pallets to pick up and where they need to go requires
guidance from a human supervisor, at least for now. The supervisor's tablet
computer, wirelessly linked to the forklift, displays the view from the
forklift's forward-looking video camera. Using stylus gestures on the image, the
supervisor indicates the truck to be unloaded, the pallet to be engaged next,
and perhaps where on the pallet to insert the forklift tines. The supervisor
also speaks to the tablet, indicating the desired destination of the target
pallet. As the system gets more sophisticated, the supervisor would need to do
less and less, eventually simply gesturing and saying "unload that truck," for
example.
But to ensure that it can always carry out the necessary tasks, if there's
ever a problem with the automated system the machine reverts to a conventional
manned forklift whenever someone climbs into the operator's cabin.
TESTS UNDER WAY:
Research began with a small test platform rigged with forklift tines and a
variety of sensors and computers that was used for a series of indoor tests and
is now continuing with a full-scale prototype being tested outdoors on the MIT
campus.
The work is part of several projects at CSAIL focused on "the development of
situational awareness for machines," explains Seth Teller, professor of computer
science and engineering and project lead. Situational awareness, Teller says,
involves the use of sensing, motion, inference and memory to acquire "a model of
the spatial layout of the world and its contents, to allow us to plan and move
purposefully in the world." Humans develop these internal maps of their
surroundings without even thinking about it, but "machines can't yet do it
automatically."
In developing the robotic system, the CSAIL researchers have made extensive
use of computer code developed for other projects, including the autonomous
vehicle MIT entered in the 2007 DARPA Grand Challenge auto race, in which
unmanned cars navigated roads without human intervention, Teller says. That work
has been reported in papers in the Journal of Field Robotics, and the forklift
project itself is the subject of a paper being submitted for publication at an
upcoming robotics conference.
Among the tasks the robot must carry out automatically is avoiding unexpected
obstacles, especially people who may be walking around in the area. That turned
out to be less of a challenge than expected: "It is possible to detect moving
people using laser range scanners," Walter says. "Things get much harder if
people are trying to trick the system by hiding or standing very still," Teller
notes.
The forklift project has involved about 30 faculty, staff and students
(including postdocs, PhD and MEng students, and UROPs) from MIT's CSAIL, LIDS,
and Courses 2, 6 and 16, as well as from Lincoln Laboratory, Draper Laboratory
and BAE Systems. It has been funded by the U.S. Army Logistics Innovation
Agency.
About the researcher :
Matthew Walter
Matthew Walter is a postdoc in the Computer Science and
Artificial Intelligence Laboratory (CSAIL)
at
MIT. He is working in collaboration with
Seth Teller as well as
Emilio Frazoli and
Nick Roy,
among others.
Matthew Walter is a research concerns problems
related to outdoor autonomous mobility and manipulation with a robotic ground
vehicle. More specifically, he is interested in strategies for object
manipulation that jointly account for object detection and manipulation in the
presence of uncertainty. The platform, in this case, is a robotic outdoor lift
truck tasked with moving objects around in a busy outdoor warehouse. The vehicle
operates on rough terrain and must manipulate objects of a priori
unknown geometry in the presence of people and other robotic and manually driven
trucks. These factors pose interesting challenges with regards to navigation,
perception, manipulation, and human-robot interaction.
Contact information of Walter :
MIT CSAIL, Stata Center
32 Vassar Street, 32-332
Cambridge, MA 02139
USA
Tel: +1 (617) 253-7772
Fax: +1 (617) 253-4640
E-mail: mwalter@mit.edu
| Tags: |
Artificial Intelligence - forklift - robotic forklift - |
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