Information-Theoretic Detection of Bimanual Interactions for Dual-Arm Robot Plan Generation

Programming by demonstration is a strategy to simplify the robot programming process for non-experts via human demonstrations. However, its adoption for bimanual tasks is an underexplored problem due to the complexity of hand coordination, which also hinders data recording. This letter presents a no...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inIEEE robotics and automation letters Vol. 10; no. 5; pp. 4532 - 4539
Main Authors Merlo, Elena, Lagomarsino, Marta, Ajoudani, Arash
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published IEEE 01.05.2025
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Summary:Programming by demonstration is a strategy to simplify the robot programming process for non-experts via human demonstrations. However, its adoption for bimanual tasks is an underexplored problem due to the complexity of hand coordination, which also hinders data recording. This letter presents a novel one-shot method for processing a single RGB video of a bimanual task demonstration to generate an execution plan for a dual-arm robotic system. To detect hand coordination policies, we apply Shannon's information theory to analyze the information flow between scene elements and leverage scene graph properties. The generated plan is a modular behavior tree that assumes different structures based on the desired arms coordination. We validated the effectiveness of this framework through multiple subject video demonstrations, which we collected and made open-source, and exploiting data from an external, publicly available dataset. Comparisons with existing methods revealed significant improvements in generating a centralized execution plan for coordinating two-arm systems.
ISSN:2377-3766
2377-3766
DOI:10.1109/LRA.2025.3552216