Dynamic Humanoid Locomotion over Uneven Terrain With Streamlined Perception-Control Pipeline
Moonyoung Lee, Youngsun Kwon, Sebin Lee, JongHun Choe, Junyong Park,, Hyobin Jeong, Yujin Heo, Min-su Kim, Jo Sungho, Sung-Eui Yoon, Jun-Ho Oh

TL;DR
This paper introduces a fast, integrated perception-control pipeline enabling a humanoid robot to dynamically walk across uneven terrain at speeds up to 0.3 m/s, with real-time footstep planning and adaptive control.
Contribution
It presents an efficient geometric footstep planner and a robust walking controller that work together for real-time dynamic locomotion over uneven terrain.
Findings
Footstep planner generates feasible steps within 5 ms
Controller adapts swing leg trajectory on-the-fly
Successful real-world experiments on various terrains
Abstract
Although bipedal locomotion provides the ability to traverse unstructured environments, it requires careful planning and control to safely walk across without falling. This poses an integrated challenge for the robot to perceive, plan, and control its movements, especially with dynamic motions where the robot may have to adapt its swing-leg trajectory onthe-fly in order to safely place its foot on the uneven terrain. In this paper we present an efficient geometric footstep planner and the corresponding walking controller that enables a humanoid robot to dynamically walk across uneven terrain at speeds up to 0.3 m/s. As dynamic locomotion, we refer first to the continuous walking motion without stopping, and second to the on-the-fly replanning of the landing footstep position in middle of the swing phase during the robot gait cycle. This is mainly achieved through the streamlined…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRobotic Locomotion and Control · Robotics and Automated Systems
