The Penn Jerboa: A Platform for Exploring Parallel Composition of Templates
Avik De, Daniel E. Koditschek

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel platform, the Penn Jerboa, which uses parallel composition of simple controllers to achieve complex legged locomotion behaviors like hopping, demonstrating the effectiveness of compositional control techniques in robotics.
Contribution
The paper presents a new platform and a behavioral programming method using parallel composition of decoupled controllers to generate complex locomotion behaviors in a passive-compliant biped.
Findings
Successful construction of a monopedal hopping gait via parallel controller composition
Physical platform data shows correspondence between template motions and real behavior
Partial proof of correctness for the compositional control approach
Abstract
We have built a 12DOF, passive-compliant legged, tailed biped actuated by four brushless DC motors. We anticipate that this machine will achieve varied modes of quasistatic and dynamic balance, enabling a broad range of locomotion tasks including sitting, standing, walking, hopping, running, turning, leaping, and more. Achieving this diversity of behavior with a single under-actuated body, requires a correspondingly diverse array of controllers, motivating our interest in compositional techniques that promote mixing and reuse of a relatively few base constituents to achieve a combinatorially growing array of available choices. Here we report on the development of one important example of such a behavioral programming method, the construction of a novel monopedal sagittal plane hopping gait through parallel composition of four decoupled 1DOF base controllers. For this example behavior,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRobotic Locomotion and Control · Prosthetics and Rehabilitation Robotics · Biomimetic flight and propulsion mechanisms
