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

Disney Researchers develop 2-legged robot that walks like an animated character

Robot mimics character's movements, not just its looks

2015-05-26
(Press-News.org) When Walt Disney created Mickey Mouse, he didn't give much thought to how he might bring his character to life in the real world. But robotics now puts that possibility within reach, so Disney researchers have found a way for a robot to mimic an animated character's walk.

Beginning with an animation of a diminutive, peanut-shaped character that walks with a rolling, somewhat bow-legged gait, Katsu Yamane and his team at Disney Research Pittsburgh analyzed the character's motion to design a robotic frame that could duplicate the walking motion using 3D-printed links and servo motors, while also fitting inside the character's skin. They then created control software that could keep the robot balanced while duplicating the character's gait as closely as possible.

"The biggest challenge is that designers don't necessarily consider physics when they create an animated character," said Yamane, senior research scientist. Roboticists, however, wrestle with physical constraints throughout the process of creating a real-life version of the character.

"It's important that, despite physical limitations, we do not sacrifice style or the quality of motion," Yamane said. The robots will need to not only look like the characters, but move in the way people are accustomed to seeing those characters move.

Yamane and Joohyung Kim of Disney Research Pittsburgh and Seungmoon Song, a Ph.D. student at Carnegie Mellon University's Robotics Institute, focused first on developing the lower half of such a robot.

"Walking is where physics matter the most," Yamane explained. "If we can find a way to make the lower half work, we can use the exact same procedure for the upper body."

They will describe the techniques and technologies they used to create the bipedal robot at the IEEE International Conference on Robotics and Automation, ICRA 2015, May 26-30 in Seattle.

Compromises were inevitable. For instance, an analysis of the animated character showed that its ankle and foot had three joints, each of which had three degrees of freedom. Integrating nine actuators in a foot isn't practical. And the researchers realized that the walking motion in the animation wasn't physically realizable - if the walking motion in the animation was used on a real robot, the robot would fall down.

By studying the dynamics of the walking motion in simulation, the researchers realized they could mimic the motion by building a leg with a hip joint that has three degrees of freedom, a knee joint with a single degree of freedom and an ankle with two degrees of freedom.

Because the joints of the robot differ from what the analysis showed that the animated character had, the researchers couldn't duplicate the character's joint movements, but identified the position trajectories of the character's pelvis, hips, knees, ankle and toes that the robot would need to duplicate. To keep the robot from falling, the researchers altered the motion, such as by keeping the character's stance foot flat on the ground.

They then optimized the trajectories to minimize any deviation from the target motions, while ensuring that the robot was stable.

INFORMATION:

For more information and a video, visit the project website http://www.disneyresearch.com/publication/development-of-a-bipedal-robot. About Disney Research Disney Research is a network of research laboratories supporting The Walt Disney Company. Its purpose is to pursue scientific and technological innovation to advance the company's broad media and entertainment efforts. Vice Presidents Jessica Hodgins and Markus Gross manage Disney Research facilities in Los Angeles, Pittsburgh, Zürich, and Boston and work closely with the Pixar and ILM research groups in the San Francisco Bay Area. Research topics include computer graphics, animation, video processing, computer vision, robotics, wireless & mobile computing, human-computer interaction, displays, behavioral economics, and machine learning.



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Climate change debate fueled by 'echo chambers,' new study finds

2015-05-26
College Park, Md and Annapolis, Md -- A new study from researchers at the University of Maryland (UMD) and the National Socio-Environmental Synthesis Center (SESYNC) demonstrates that the highly contentious debate on climate change is fueled in part by how information flows throughout policy networks. The UMD and SESYNC researchers found that "echo chambers"--social network structures in which individuals with the same viewpoint share information with each other--play a significant role in climate policy communication. The researchers say that echo chambers may help ...

How to get high-quality RNA from chemically complex plants

2015-05-26
Ask any molecular plant biologist about RNA extractions and you might just open up the floodgates to the woes of troubleshooting. RNA extraction is a notoriously tricky and sensitive lab procedure. New protocols out of the University of Florida are quicker, more effective, and more reliable than previous methods. "Obtaining pure and intact RNA samples is essential for sequencing the active genes, or the transcriptome, of a plant," explains botanist Ingrid Jordon-Thaden, who developed the protocols. The protocols are given in bench-ready form with detailed notes and ...

Measuring arm circumference is a more reliable indicator of malnutrition

2015-05-26
Adam C. Levine, M.D., an emergency medicine physician at Rhode Island Hospital found that the World Health Organization's current weight-based guidelines for assessing malnutrition in children with diarrhea are not as reliable as measuring the child's upper arm circumference. His research was published in the Journal of Nutrition. Diarrhea is common among children who visit health facilities in developing nations. The traditional measures for determining whether a child is moderately or severely malnourished are based on assessing the child's weight directly. Levine found ...

One to ovoid?

One to ovoid?
2015-05-26
Old-school field work meets cutting-edge technology! For decades, researchers have been making artificial eggs out of plaster, wood, and other materials to test how birds identify and reject the eggs that invading "brood parasites" sometimes sneak into their nests. But these methods have many limitations, and a new study published in the open-access journal PeerJ is the first to test the usefulness of 3D printed eggs for research on egg rejection. Brood parasites are birds that don't build nests of their own. Instead, they slip their eggs into the nests of other species, ...

Simple recipe to make sensory hair cells in the ear

2015-05-26
Scientists at the Molecular Medicine Institute in Lisbon, Portugal, and at the University College London Ear Institute, United Kingdom, have developed a simple and efficient protocol to generate inner ear hair cells, the cells responsible for our hearing and sense of balance. This study is an important step for the future production of large numbers of these cells for use in cell transplantation therapies or large-scale drug screens. The research has just been published in the scientific journal Development at http://dev.biologists.org/. Sensory hair cells located in ...

TVs and second screens a bad combination for advertisers

2015-05-26
COLUMBUS, Ohio - If you're watching television while using a second screen - like a smartphone or tablet - new research suggests that some of the most expensive marketing messages aimed at you are missing their mark. While the trend of "second screen" use has become pervasive, this is the first study to show that viewers have trouble recalling brands they see (or hear) on TV if they're using such devices. "Viewers don't even remember that your brand was there on TV because they were busy posting on Facebook or Twitter or reading email," said Jonathan Jensen, who led ...

Blueprint for a thirsty world from Down Under

2015-05-26
Irvine, Calif., May 26, 2015 - The Millennium Drought in southeastern Australia forced Greater Melbourne, a city of 4.3 million people, to successfully implement innovations that hold critical lessons for water-stressed regions around the world, according to findings by UC Irvine and Australian researchers. It wasn't a new pipeline over the mountains, special rate hikes or a $6 billion desalination plant that kept faucets running. Rather, integrated outreach by utilities and agencies required to work together led to a culture shift among ordinary water users, according ...

Surgical skills lab and dissection curricula train neurosurgical residents

2015-05-26
CHARLOTTESVILLE, VA (MAY 26, 2015). A surgical skills laboratory and corresponding dissection curricula were established in the Department of Neurosurgery at the Cleveland Clinic in the 2011-2012 academic year. The authors describe how this came about and what it has meant for neurosurgical resident training and assessment of residents' surgical skills in the following paper: "Establishing a surgical skills laboratory and dissection curriculum for neurosurgical residency training" by James K. C. Liu, MD, and colleagues, published today online, ahead of print in the Journal ...

Beliefs about complementary and alternative medicine predict use among patients with cancer

2015-05-26
A new study has shed light on how cancer patients' attitudes and beliefs drive the use of complementary and alternative medicine. Published early online in CANCER, a peer-reviewed journal of the American Cancer Society, the findings may help hospitals develop more effective and accessible integrative oncology services for patients. Although many cancer patients use complementary and alternative medicine, what drives this usage is unclear. To investigate, a team led by Jun Mao, MD and Joshua Bauml, MD, of the Abramson Cancer Center at the University of Pennsylvania's Perelman ...

Motherhood permanently alters the brain and its response to hormone therapy later in life

2015-05-26
This news release is available in French. Hormone therapy (HT) is prescribed to alleviate some of the symptoms of menopause in women. Menopausal women are more likely to be diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease but not other forms of dementia, and HT has been prescribed to treat cognitive decline in post-menopausal women with variable degrees of effectiveness. New research by Dr. Liisa Galea, at the University of British Columbia, suggests the form of estrogens used in HT and previous motherhood could be critical to explain why HT has variable effects. Research in ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

SGLT2 inhibitors and kidney outcomes by glomerular filtration rate and albuminuria

Comprehensive analysis supports routine use of metabolic drug for people with all levels of kidney function

Temporary benefit for immune system in early HIV treatment, but dysregulation returns

Chronic kidney disease is now the ninth leading cause of death

Chronic kidney disease has more than doubled since 1990, now affecting nearly 800 million people worldwide

Participant experiences in a kidney failure care intervention in the navigate-kidney study

Community health worker support for Hispanic and Latino individuals receiving hemodialysis

Scientists unveil new strategies to balance farming and ecological protection in Northeast China

UT Health San Antonio scientist helps shape new traumatic brain injury guidelines

Rising nitrogen and rainfall could supercharge greenhouse gas emissions from the world’s largest grasslands

Study uncovers glomerular disease outcomes across the lifespan

Sotagliflozin outperforms dapagliflozin for reducing salt- sensitive hypertension and kidney injury in rats

Trial analysis reveals almost all adults with hypertensive chronic kidney disease would benefit from intensive blood pressure lowering

A husband’s self-esteem may protect against preterm births, study finds

Michigan State University's James Madison College receives over $1 million to launch civic education academy

White paper on recovering from burnout through mentoring released by University of Phoenix College of Doctoral Studies

Defunct Pennsylvania oil and gas wells may leak methane, metals into water

Kessler Foundation’s John DeLuca, PhD, honored with Reitan Clinical Excellence Award from National Academy of Neuropsychology

Discordance in creatinine- and cystatin C–based eGFR and clinical outcomes

Disagreement between two kidney function tests predicts serious health problems

American College of Cardiology, OpenEvidence to advance AI-enabled, evidence-based cardiovascular care

OHSU researchers develop promising drug for aggressive breast cancer

Evaluating the potential of a sleep intervention among youth at high-risk for borderline personality disorder

Saturn’s icy moon may host a stable ocean fit for life, study finds

More children, shorter lifespan? Clear evidence from the Great Finnish Famine

Climate intervention techniques could reduce the nutritional value of crops

Mapping resilient supply solutions for graphite, a critical mineral powering energy storage: Rice experts’ take

Effects of sodium glucose cotransporter 2 inhibitors by diabetes status and level of albuminuria

Young people using unregulated nicotine pouches despite health risks

New study finds family and caregivers can help spot post-surgery delirium early

[Press-News.org] Disney Researchers develop 2-legged robot that walks like an animated character
Robot mimics character's movements, not just its looks