This robot can hike as fast as a human
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*Correction: Joonho Lee's first name is misspelled in the credits.
In 2020, researchers at ETH Zurich introduced the world to a four-legged robot named ANYmal that could traverse a variety of environments without slipping. The machine relied solely on proprioceptionawareness of its body positionto navigate these complex terrains. ANYmal couldnt actually see its surroundings, however, which limited how fast it could move.
This year, the same researchers gave ANYmal eyesdepth sensors that allowed it to take in its surroundings. The robot could create a height map of its environment to plan and adapt to its terrain. But the sensors were not always accurate: soft, unstable surfaces, such as vegetation or snow, appeared as solid obstacles the robot could not walk over.
To overcome this problem, the researchers trained ANYmal to rely solely on its proprioceptive perception when it was at odds with its height map. After integrating these senses, this iteration of the robot could move twice as fast as its predecessor, and about as fast as an average humans walking speed, researchers report today in Science Robotics. Watch the video to see ANYmal in actionfrom the mountains of Switzerland to an underground tunnel.
Read the research: https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/scirobotics.abk2822
In 2020, researchers at ETH Zurich introduced the world to a four-legged robot named ANYmal that could traverse a variety of environments without slipping. The machine relied solely on proprioceptionawareness of its body positionto navigate these complex terrains. ANYmal couldnt actually see its surroundings, however, which limited how fast it could move.
This year, the same researchers gave ANYmal eyesdepth sensors that allowed it to take in its surroundings. The robot could create a height map of its environment to plan and adapt to its terrain. But the sensors were not always accurate: soft, unstable surfaces, such as vegetation or snow, appeared as solid obstacles the robot could not walk over.
To overcome this problem, the researchers trained ANYmal to rely solely on its proprioceptive perception when it was at odds with its height map. After integrating these senses, this iteration of the robot could move twice as fast as its predecessor, and about as fast as an average humans walking speed, researchers report today in Science Robotics. Watch the video to see ANYmal in actionfrom the mountains of Switzerland to an underground tunnel.
Read the research: https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/scirobotics.abk2822
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