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Publikation

Simulating Human Table Tennis with a Biomimetic Robot Setup

Katharina Mülling; Jens Kober; Jan Peters
In: Stéphane Doncieux; Benoît Girard; Agnès Guillot; John Hallam; Jean-Arcady Meyer; Jean-Baptiste Mouret (Hrsg.). From Animals to Animats 11, 11th International Conference on Simulation of Adaptive Behavior, SAB 2010. Proceedings. International Conference on Simulation of Adaptive Behavior (SAB-2010), August 25-28, Paris, France, Pages 273-282, Lecture Notes in Computer Science, Vol. 6226, Springer, 2010.

Zusammenfassung

Playing table tennis is a difficult motor task which requires fast movements, accurate control and adaptation to task parameters. Although human beings see and move slower than most robot systems they outperform all table tennis robots significantly. In this paper we study human table tennis and present a robot system that mimics human striking behavior. Therefore we model the human movements involved in hitting a table tennis ball using discrete movement stages and the virtual hitting point hypothesis. The resulting model is implemented on an anthropomorphic robot arm with 7 degrees of freedom using robotics methods. We verify the functionality of the model both in a physical realistic simulation of an anthropomorphic robot arm and on a real Barrett WAM.

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