Applied Sciences (Dec 2022)

Dexterous Object Manipulation with an Anthropomorphic Robot Hand via Natural Hand Pose Transformer and Deep Reinforcement Learning

  • Patricio Rivera Lopez,
  • Ji-Heon Oh,
  • Jin Gyun Jeong,
  • Hwanseok Jung,
  • Jin Hyuk Lee,
  • Ismael Espinoza Jaramillo,
  • Channabasava Chola,
  • Won Hee Lee,
  • Tae-Seong Kim

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/app13010379
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 1
p. 379

Abstract

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Dexterous object manipulation using anthropomorphic robot hands is of great interest for natural object manipulations across the areas of healthcare, smart homes, and smart factories. Deep reinforcement learning (DRL) is a particularly promising approach to solving dexterous manipulation tasks with five-fingered robot hands. Yet, controlling an anthropomorphic robot hand via DRL in order to obtain natural, human-like object manipulation with high dexterity remains a challenging task in the current robotic field. Previous studies have utilized some predefined human hand poses to control the robot hand’s movements for successful object-grasping. However, the hand poses derived from these grasping taxonomies are limited to a partial range of adaptability that could be performed by the robot hand. In this work, we propose a combinatory approach of a deep transformer network which produces a wider range of natural hand poses to configure the robot hand’s movements, and an adaptive DRL to control the movements of an anthropomorphic robot hand according to these natural hand poses. The transformer network learns and infers the natural robot hand poses according to the object affordance. Then, DRL trains a policy using the transformer output to grasp and relocate the object to the designated target location. Our proposed transformer-based DRL (T-DRL) has been tested using various objects, such as an apple, a banana, a light bulb, a camera, a hammer, and a bottle. Additionally, its performance is compared with a baseline DRL model via natural policy gradient (NPG). The results demonstrate that our T-DRL achieved an average manipulation success rate of 90.1% for object manipulation and outperformed NPG by 24.8%.

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