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Robots Made Out of Branches Use Deep Learning to Walk

03 Jul 2019
Robots Made Out of Branches Use Deep Learning to Walk
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Building robots is a finicky procedure, needing an exhaustive amount of thought and care. It’s generally important to have a very clear idea of what you want your robot to do and how you want it to do it, and then you build a prototype, discover everything that’s wrong with it, build something different and better, and repeat until you run out of time and/or money.
 
But robots don’t normally have to be this confusing, as long as your anticipations for what they should be able to do are correspondingly low. In a paper offered at a NeurIPS workshop last December, a group of analysts from the University of Tokyo and Preferred Networks experimented with building mobile robots out of a couple of generic servos plus stuff you can find on the ground, like tree branches.
 
These robots figure out how to walk in simulation first, through deep reinforcement knowing. The way this is used in the paper is by finding up some sticks, analyzing and 3D scanning them, simulating the entire robot, and then rewarding gaits that result in the farthest movement. There’s also some hand-tuning required to eliminate behaviors that might (for example) “cause stress and wear in the real robot.”
 
Overall, this is maybe not the kind of strategy that you’d be able to use for most applications, but we can ponder about how robots like these may become a little bit more practical at some point. The idea of being able to make a mobile robot out of whatever is lying around (plus some servos and maybe a sensor or two) is a compelling one, and it appears like you could make a gait from scratch on the physical robot using trial and error and feedback from some basic sensors, since we’ve seen similar things done on other robotic platforms.
 
Found materials robots like these are not likely to be as competent as traditional robotic designs, so they’d likely only be useful under certain circumstances. Not having to hassle about transporting structural materials would be nice, as would being able to make a variety of designs as necessary using one generalized hardware set. And building a robot out of locally available materials means that anything you put together will be really easy to fix, even if you do have to teach it to move all over again.



This article is originally posted on Tronserve.com

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