Abstract
This paper uses robots to assemble pegs into holes on surfaces with different colors and textures. It especially targets at the problem of peg-in-hole assembly with initial position uncertainty. Two in-hand cameras and a force-torque sensor are used to account for the position uncertainty. A program sequence comprising learning-based visual servoing, spiral search, and impedance control is implemented to perform the peg-in-hole task with feedback from the above sensors. Contributions are mainly made in the learning-based visual servoing of the sequence, where a deep neural network is trained with various sets of synthetic data generated using the concept of domain randomization to predict where a hole is. In the experiments and analysis section, the network is analyzed and compared, and a real-world robotic system to insert pegs to holes using the proposed method is implemented. The results show that the implemented peg-in-hole assembly system can perform successful peg-in-hole insertions on surfaces with various colors and textures. It can generally speed up the entire peg-in-hole process.
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URL
http://arxiv.org/abs/1902.09157