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posted by Fnord666 on Tuesday December 25 2018, @06:05PM   Printer-friendly
from the but-can-it-tune-a-fish dept.

Submitted via IRC for SoyCow1984

3D-printed robot hand plays the piano

The robot hand, developed by researchers at the University of Cambridge, was made by 3D-printing soft and rigid materials together to replicate of all the bones and ligaments -- but not the muscles or tendons -- in a human hand. Even though this limited the robot hand's range of motion compared to a human hand, the researchers found that a surprisingly wide range of movement was still possible by relying on the hand's mechanical design.

Using this 'passive' movement -- in which the fingers cannot move independently -- the robot was able to mimic different styles of piano playing without changing the material or mechanical properties of the hand. The results, reported in the journal Science Robotics, could help inform the design of robots that are capable of more natural movement with minimal energy use.

Complex movement in animals and machines results from the interplay between the brain (or controller), the environment and the mechanical body. The mechanical properties and design of systems are important for intelligent functioning, and help both animals and machines to move in complex ways without expending unnecessary amounts of energy.

"We can use passivity to achieve a wide range of movement in robots: walking, swimming or flying, for example," said Josie Hughes from Cambridge's Department of Engineering, the paper's first author. "Smart mechanical design enables us to achieve the maximum range of movement with minimal control costs: we wanted to see just how much movement we could get with mechanics alone."

[...] The researchers programmed the robot to play a number of short musical phrases with clipped (staccato) or smooth (legato) notes, achieved through the movement of the wrist. "It's just the basics at this point, but even with this single movement, we can still get quite complex and nuanced behaviour," said Hughes.

Despite the limitations of the robot hand, the researchers say their approach will drive further research into the underlying principles of skeletal dynamics to achieve complex movement tasks, as well as learning where the limitations for passive movement systems lie.

"This approach to mechanical design can change how we build robotics," said Iida. "The fabrication approach allows us to design mechanically intelligent structures in a way that is highly scalable."

Video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=16&v=XDgffOW6ZzQ


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  • (Score: 2) by RamiK on Tuesday December 25 2018, @08:55PM

    by RamiK (1813) on Tuesday December 25 2018, @08:55PM (#778407)

    Doesn't work: https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=16&v=XDgffOW6ZzQ [youtube.com]

    Works: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XDgffOW6ZzQ&time_continue=16 [youtube.com]

    Also works: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XDgffOW6ZzQ [youtube.com]

    Though it might be an extension or something I have running.

    --
    compiling...
  • (Score: 3, Interesting) by fyngyrz on Wednesday December 26 2018, @04:19AM

    by fyngyrz (6567) on Wednesday December 26 2018, @04:19AM (#778484) Journal

    My grandmother, a career concert pianist, could play (at least) several tunes with a couple of grapefruit. She just carelessly rolled them around (well, that's what it looked like to me at age 7 or so) her grand piano and out came beautiful music. Classical, blues... it was astonishing to me. It was one of the things that led to my own years as a working musician. I don't think you can ever forget the first time someone makes beautiful music right there in front of you, especially in a way you can't really understand at all. It's as if she was conjuring magic right out of thin air. With grapefruit. If nothing else, I never forgot it, that's for sure.

    So I can't say I'm particularly surprised that a robot hand with any degree of freedom at all beyond XYZ as one solid lump can also do so. Pretty sure it can be done with just about anything, given a carefully chosen set of musical goals. That these folks are exited about it just tells me... they never met my grandmother.

    --
    I had the house child-proofed. But they must
    have done it wrong. Kids still get in somehow.

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