Footstep Adjustment for Biped Push Recovery on Slippery Surfaces
Erfan Ghorbani, Hossein Karimpour, Venus Pasandi, Mehdi Keshmiri

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel control strategy for bipedal robots that adjusts footsteps to prevent slipping and recover from pushes on low-friction surfaces, inspired by human gait reactions.
Contribution
It develops a real-time, discrete event-based controller that considers surface friction limitations to enhance stability and push recovery in bipeds.
Findings
Effective slip prevention on low-friction surfaces.
Successful push recovery demonstrated through simulations.
Gait switching reduces fall risk under disturbances.
Abstract
Despite extensive studies on motion stabilization of bipeds, they still suffer from the lack of disturbance coping capability on slippery surfaces. In this paper, a novel controller for stabilizing a bipedal motion in its sagittal plane is developed with regard to the surface friction limitations. By taking into account the physical limitation of the surface in the stabilization trend, a more advanced level of reliability is achieved that provides higher functionalities such as push recovery on low-friction surfaces and prevents the stabilizer from overreacting. The discrete event-based strategy consists of modifying the step length and time period at the beginning of each footstep in order to reestablish stability necessary conditions while taking into account the surface friction limitation as a constraint to prevent slippage. Adjusting footsteps to prevent slippage in confronting…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRobotic Locomotion and Control · Human Motion and Animation · Music Technology and Sound Studies
