PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Cats and athletes teach robots to fall

Georgia Tech studies cat and human mid-air orientation as inspiration for safe robotic falling and landings

2014-11-13
(Press-News.org) A cat always lands on its feet. At least, that's how the adage goes. Karen Liu hopes that in the future, this will be true of robots as well.

To understand the way feline or human behavior during falls might be applied to robot landings, Liu, an associate professor in the School of Interactive Computing (IC) at Georgia Tech, delved into the physics of everything from falling cats to the mid-air orientation of divers and astronauts.

In research presented at the 2014 IEE/RSJ International Conference on Intelligent Robots and Systems (IROS), Liu shared her studies of mid-air orientation and impact behavior in both cats and humans as it applies to reduced impact in falling robots, especially those that one day may be used for search-and-rescue missions in hazardous conditions.

Not only did Liu and her team of Georgia Tech researchers simulate falls, they also studied the impact of landings.

"It's not the fall that kills you. It's the sudden stop at the end," Liu said. "One of the most important factors that determines the damage of the fall is the landing angle."

In their experiments with a small robot consisting of a main body and two symmetric legs with paddles, the team compensated for the fact that a robot cannot move fast enough in a laboratory setting by creating a reduced-gravity environment using a tilted surface similar to an air hockey table outfitted with a leaf blower. Liu along with Jeffrey Bingham, Ravi Haksar, Jeongseok Lee and Jun Ueda, simulated the elements of a long fall and explored the possibility of a "soft roll" landing to reduce impact and damage to the robot.

In their work, the researchers found that a well-designed robot has the "brain" to process the computation necessary to achieve a softer landing, though current motor and servo technology does not allow the hardware to move quickly enough for cat-like impacts. Future research aims at further teaching a robot the skill of orientation and impact, a feat that falling humans cannot achieve but cats perform naturally.

"Most importantly, the human brain cannot compute fast enough to determine the optimal sequence of poses the body needs to reach during a long-distance fall to achieve a safe landing," the researchers note.

"Theoretically, no matter what initial position and initial speed we have, we can precisely control the landing angle by changing our body poses in the air," says Ueda, an associate professor in the Woodruff School of Mechanical Engineering. "In practice, however, we have a lot of constraints, like joint limits or muscle strength, that prevent us from changing poses fast enough."

"If we believe that one day we will have the capability to build robots that can do this kind of highly dynamic motion, we also have to teach robots how to fall -- and how to land, safely, from a jump or a relatively high fall," Liu said.

INFORMATION:

Learn how to teach robots to fall in the College of Computing's "Cats and Athletes Teaching Robots to Fall" research video.

For more of Liu's research, visit "Falling and Landing Motion Control for Character Animation." For the research paper, go to "Orienting in Mid-air through Configuration Changes to Achieve a Rolling Landing for Reducing Impact after a Fall."

This research is supported by the National Science Foundation (NSF) under Award EFRI-1137229 and by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) under Award HR0011-12-C-0111. Any conclusions or opinions are those of the authors and do not necessarily represent the official views of the NSF or DARPA.



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Mars, too, has macroweather

2014-11-13
Weather, which changes day-to-day due to constant fluctuations in the atmosphere, and climate, which varies over decades, are familiar. More recently, a third regime, called "macroweather," has been used to describe the relatively stable regime between weather and climate. A new study by researchers at McGill University and UCL finds that this same three-part pattern applies to atmospheric conditions on Mars. The results, published in Geophysical Research Letters, also show that the sun plays a major role in determining macroweather. The research promises to advance ...

Effectiveness of innovative gene therapy treatment demonstrated in canine model of DMD

2014-11-13
Duchenne muscular dystrophy is the most common neuromuscular disease of children (affecting 1 boy in 3500-5000 births). It is caused by a genetic defect in the DMD gene residing on the X chromosome, which results in the absence of the dystrophin protein essential to the proper functioning of muscles. The treatment being developed by researchers at Atlantic Gene Therapies, Généthon and the Institute of Myology, is based on the use of an AAV vector (Adeno Associated Virus) carrying a transgene for the skipping of a specific exon which allows functional dystrophin ...

New process isolates promising material

2014-11-13
After graphene was first produced in the lab in 2004, thousands of laboratories began developing graphene products worldwide. Researchers were amazed by its lightweight and ultra-strong properties. Ten years later, scientists now search for other materials that have the same level of potential. "We continue to work with graphene, and there are some applications where it works very well," said Mark Hersam, the Bette and Neison Harris Chair in Teaching Excellence at Northwestern University's McCormick School of Engineering and Applied Science, who is a graphene expert. ...

High blood pressure puts 1 in 4 Nigerians at risk, study says

2014-11-13
High blood pressure - already a massive hidden killer in Nigeria - is set to sharply rise as the country adopts western lifestyles, a study suggests. Researchers who conducted the first up-to-date nationwide estimate of the condition in Nigeria warn that this will strain the country's already-stretched health system. Increased public awareness, lifestyle changes, screening and early detection are vital to tackle the increasing threat of the disease, they say. High blood pressure - also known as hypertension - is twice as high in Nigeria compared with other East ...

African Americans at greater risk from stroke and other cerebrovascular diseases

2014-11-13
Researchers at The University of Texas have found that compared to Caucasian Americans, African Americans have impaired blood flow regulation in the brain that could contribute to a greater risk of cerebrovascular diseases such as stroke, transient ischaemic attack ("mini stroke"), subarachnoid haemorrhage or vascular dementia. These findings were published in Experimental Physiology, the journal of The Physiological Society. Cerebrovascular diseases can result from reduced blood flow in affected areas of the brain. It is still unclear why African Americans are at higher ...

Tiny needles offer potential new treatment for two major eye diseases

Tiny needles offer potential new treatment for two major eye diseases
2014-11-13
Needles almost too small to be seen with the unaided eye could be the basis for new treatment options for two of the world's leading eye diseases: glaucoma and corneal neovascularization. The microneedles, ranging in length from 400 to 700 microns, could provide a new way to deliver drugs to specific areas within the eye relevant to these diseases. By targeting the drugs only to specific parts of the eye instead of the entire eye, researchers hope to increase effectiveness, limit side effects, and reduce the amount of drug needed. For glaucoma, which affects about 2.2 ...

Novel cancer vaccine approach for brain tumors

2014-11-13
(PHILADELPHIA) - Glioblastoma is the most common aggressive primary brain tumor, and despite advances in standard treatment, the median survival is about 15 months (compared to 4 months without treatment). Researchers at Thomas Jefferson University have been working on a cancer vaccine that would extend that survival by activating the patient's immune system to fight the brain tumor. A study published online November 13th in the journal Cancer Immunology, Immunotherapy drilled down to the cellular and molecular mechanisms behind the vaccine, paving the way for further development ...

Premature infants exposed to unsafe levels of chemical in medical products

2014-11-13
Hospitalized premature infants are exposed to unsafe levels of a chemical found in numerous medical products used to treat them, raising questions about whether critically ill newborns may be adversely affected by equipment designed to help save their lives. The chemical, di(2-ethylhexyl)phthalate (DEHP), is used to increase flexibility of many plastic devices. These products, made from polyvinyl chloride (PVC), include most intravenous tubing, catheters, endotracheal tubes, and fluid and blood product bags. DEHP doesn't bind chemically to PVC, and is able to leach into ...

Use of private social media affects work performance

Use of private social media affects work performance
2014-11-13
In a new study, Use of Social Network Sites at Work: Does it Impair Performance?, Postdoctoral Fellow Cecilie Schou Andreassen and colleagues at the University of Bergen's (UiB) Department of Psychosocial Science looked at the consequences of the use of social media during working hours. Every day, more than one billion people worldwide use social media. This habit has also invaded the workplace, as some research reports that four out of five employees use social media for private purpose during working hours. Surprisingly, although this type of distraction may potentially ...

Genetic testing could improve breast cancer prevention

2014-11-13
Scientists used mathematical models to show that analysing genetic data, alongside a range of other risk factors, could substantially improve the ability to flag up women at highest risk of developing breast cancer. Their study showed that prevention strategies could be improved by testing not only as currently for major cancer predisposition genes such as BRCA1 and BRCA2 - which identify a small percentage of women at very high risk - but also by factoring in data on multiple gene variants that individually have only a small effect on risk, but are more common in the ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Psychosis rates increasing in more recent generations

Tiny new dinosaur Foskeia pelendonum reshapes the dinosaur family tree

New discovery sheds light on evolutionary crossroads of vertebrates   

Aortic hemiarch reconstruction safely matches complex aortic arch reconstruction for acute dissection in older adults

Destination Earth digital twin to improve AI climate and weather predictions

Late-breaking study finds comparable long-term survival between two leading multi-arterial CABG strategies

Lymph node examination should be expanded to accurately assess cancer spread in patients with lung cancer

Study examines prediction of surgical risk in growing population of adults with congenital heart disease

Novel radiation therapy QA method: Monte Carlo simulation meets deep learning for fast, accurate epid transmission dose generation

A 100-fold leap into the unknown: a new search for muonium conversion into antimuonium

A new approach to chiral α-amino acid synthesis - photo-driven nitrogen heterocyclic carbene catalyzed highly enantioselective radical α-amino esterification

Physics-defying discovery sheds new light on how cells move

Institute for Data Science in Oncology announces new focus-area lead for advancing data science to reduce public cancer burden

Mapping the urban breath

Waste neem seeds become high-performance heat batteries for clean energy storage

Scientists map the “physical genome” of biochar to guide next generation carbon materials

Mobile ‘endoscopy on wheels’ brings lifesaving GI care to rural South Africa

Taming tumor chaos: Brown University Health researchers uncover key to improving glioblastoma treatment

Researchers enable microorganisms to build molecules with light

Laws to keep guns away from distressed individuals reduce suicides

Study shows how local business benefits from city services

RNA therapy may be a solution for infant hydrocephalus

Global Virus Network statement on Nipah virus outbreak

A new molecular atlas of tau enables precision diagnostics and drug targeting across neurodegenerative diseases

Trends in US live births by race and ethnicity, 2016-2024

Sex and all-cause mortality in the US, 1999 to 2019

Nasal vaccine combats bird flu infection in rodents

Sepsis study IDs simple ways to save lives in Africa

“Go Red. Shop with Heart.” to save women’s lives and support heart health this February

Korea University College of Medicine successfully concludes the 2025 Lee Jong-Wook Fellowship on Infectious Disease Specialists Program

[Press-News.org] Cats and athletes teach robots to fall
Georgia Tech studies cat and human mid-air orientation as inspiration for safe robotic falling and landings