Friday, March 13, 2026
ADVT 
Tech

Indian-Origin Computer Engineer's Five-Fingered Robotic Hand Learns On Its Own

Darpan News Desk IANS, 10 May, 2016 12:31 PM
    A team led by an Indian-origin computer engineer from University of Washington has built a five-fingered robotic hand that can not only perform dexterous in-hand manipulation but also learn from its own experience without depending on humans to direct it.
     
    Hand manipulation is one of the hardest problems that roboticists have to solve.
     
    “Several robots today have pretty capable arms but the hand is as simple as a suction cup or maybe a claw or a gripper,” said lead author Vikash Kumar, doctoral student in computer science and engineering.
     
    The team spent years custom building one of the most highly capable five-fingered robot hands in the world.
     
    Then they developed an accurate simulation model that enables a computer to analyse movements in real time.
     
    In their latest demonstration, they apply the model to the hardware and real-world tasks like rotating an elongated object.
     
    With each attempt, the robot hand gets progressively more adept at spinning the tube, thanks to machine learning algorithms that help it model both the basic physics involved and plan which actions it should take to achieve the desired result.
     
    “What we are using is a universal approach that enables the robot to learn from its own movements and requires no tweaking from us,” added senior author and lab director Emo Todorov.
     
     
    Building a dexterous, five-fingered robot hand poses challenges, both in design and control.
     
    The dexterous robot hand -- which the team built at a cost of roughly $300,000 -- uses a “Shadow Hand” skeleton actuated with a custom pneumatic system and can move faster than a human hand.
     
    It is too expensive for routine commercial or industrial use but it allows the researchers to push core technologies and test innovative control strategies.
     
    The team developed algorithms that allowed a computer to model highly complex five-fingered behaviours and plan movements to achieve different outcomes -- like typing on a keyboard or dropping and catching a stick -- in simulation.
     
    Most recently, the research team has transferred the models to work on the actual five-fingered hand hardware, which never proves to be exactly the same as a simulated scenario.
     
    As the robot hand performs different tasks, the system collects data from various sensors and motion capture cameras and employs machine learning algorithms to continually refine and develop more realistic models.
     
     
    "It's like sitting through a lesson, going home and doing your homework to understand things better and then coming back to school a little more intelligent the next day," Kumar noted in a paper to be presented at the IEEE International Conference on Robotics and Automation in Stockholm on May 17.

    MORE Tech ARTICLES

    Playstation 4 Sells Over 4.1 Mn Units In Holiday Season

    Playstation 4 Sells Over 4.1 Mn Units In Holiday Season
    Despite the unavailability of sales data of its major competitors, Microsoft and Nintendo, the figures reported by Sony suggest that the Playstation 4 again dominated the gaming console market for the second consecutive year.

    Playstation 4 Sells Over 4.1 Mn Units In Holiday Season

    Smartphone Swipe To Unlock Your Suitcase

    Smartphone Swipe To Unlock Your Suitcase
    US-based start-up Digipas has launched a "smart" lock that allows users to open or lock their luggage with just a swipe of their smartphone screens.

    Smartphone Swipe To Unlock Your Suitcase

    Top Fitness Apps Not Satisfying

    Top Fitness Apps Not Satisfying
    The inaugural "2015 State Of The U.S. Health & Fitness Apps Economy" ARC 360 report published by Applause looked at 39 health and fitness apps and 28 medical apps.

    Top Fitness Apps Not Satisfying

    An App To Delete Inappropriate Text Messages

    An App To Delete Inappropriate Text Messages
    If you have sent some inappropriate text messages to your friend and want to delete it from his/her device permanently, a new app called Strings could help you do so.

    An App To Delete Inappropriate Text Messages

    Turn Your Skin Into A Smartphone Display

    Turn Your Skin Into A Smartphone Display
     A wearable device that projects the image of a Android tablet on your skin will be a reality soon. Once worn on your wrist, a small light beam on the device, known as the Cicret Bracelet, would project your Android homepage right on your forearm.

    Turn Your Skin Into A Smartphone Display

    Facebook Adopts Worker-friendly Management Technique

    Facebook Adopts Worker-friendly Management Technique
    To effectively shape its overwhelmingly young work force into future leaders, the social networking site Facebook has adopted a set of somewhat unconventional management techniques.

    Facebook Adopts Worker-friendly Management Technique