A Computational Multi-Criteria Optimization Approach to Controller Design for Physical Human-Robot Interaction
Yusuf Aydin, Ozan Tokatli, Volkan Patoglu, Cagatay Basdogan

TL;DR
This paper introduces a multi-criteria optimization framework for designing physical human-robot interaction controllers, balancing stability robustness and transparency to improve safety and performance.
Contribution
It proposes a Pareto optimization approach to jointly optimize stability and transparency, enabling informed trade-offs and fair comparison among controllers.
Findings
Fractional order admittance controllers achieve higher transparency than integer order controllers.
The framework effectively identifies optimal controller parameters balancing stability and transparency.
Experimental validation confirms the advantages of the proposed multi-criteria design approach.
Abstract
Physical human-robot interaction (pHRI) integrates the benefits of human operator and a collaborative robot in tasks involving physical interaction, with the aim of increasing the task performance. However, the design of interaction controllers that achieve safe and transparent operations is challenging, mainly due to the contradicting nature of these objectives. Knowing that attaining perfect transparency is practically unachievable, controllers that allow better compromise between these objectives are desirable. In this paper, we propose a multi-criteria optimization framework, which jointly optimizes the stability robustness and transparency of a closed-loop pHRI system for a given interaction controller. In particular, we propose a Pareto optimization framework that allows the designer to make informed decisions by thoroughly studying the trade-off between stability robustness and…
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