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[Lab image] Manipulation Lab
Heads: Matthew Mason and Michael Erdmann
Contact: Matthew Mason (matt.mason@cs.cmu.edu)

Mailing address:
Carnegie Mellon University
Robotics Institute
5000 Forbes Avenue
Pittsburgh, PA 15213

Location:
NSH A519

For more information, see this lab's homepage.

This page last updated - January 2007.
Jump to: Lab Description | Personnel | Projects | Publications

Lab Description

The Manipulation Laboratory at Carnegie Mellon University investigates fundamental modes of manipulation under uncertainty. Our goal is to produce robots that can perform a variety of tasks in the physical world, ranging from industrial assembly to everyday chores. Examples include prepositioning parts for camcorder assembly to sorting papers on a desktop.

Our key contribution has been to elucidate and harness natural sources of information. Often, when asked to name sources of information researchers think of simple sensors such as cameras, light detectors, and strain gauges. They forget that action is as much a source of information as it is a source of uncertainty. Dropping a book on a desk is often the best way to know that the book is on the table. More complicated mechanical information appears in dynamic settings. Pushing on a coffee cup with a sensating finger provides a combination of mechanical and sensory information that allows the robot to determine the cup's shape and pose.

Many techniques such as these were first developed in the Manipulation Laboratory in the context of hands and arms interacting with objects in the world. They are now commonplace in other domains, such as mobile robotics.

Software automation has become a natural part of human life. In the future this automation will extend to physical devices. Today we can place orders for goods over the internet, but humans still pack and ship these orders. In the future, we will be able to go grocery shopping without human intervention. Today, we can call up cameras to view scenery in Hawaii or New York. In the future we will be able to sample the plants and rocks we see at such distances. The Manipulation Laboratory is contributing with fundamental research into the nature of action and sensing and their natural connections.

Personnel [Past members]

Name Title Email Address
Amir's personal homepage Amir Degani PhD Student, RI adegani@andrew.cmu.edu
Michael's personal homepage Michael Erdmann Professor, Computer Science and Robotics, RI/CS xxx
Ross Alan Knepper PhD Student, RI rak@cmu.edu
Matthew's personal homepage Matthew Mason Director, Robotics Institute, RI/CS matt.mason@cs.cmu.edu
Illah's personal homepage Illah Nourbakhsh Associate Professor illah@ri.cmu.edu
Ramprasad Ravichandran PhD Student, RI raam@cmu.edu

Current Projects [Past Projects]

Desktop Robotics - Is it possible to build robots which take the desktop as their task domain?
Legless Locomotion - A novel locomotion technique for legged robots when their legs don't touch the ground!
Robotic Origami Folding - Origami, the human art of paper sculpture, is a fresh challenge for the field of robotic manipulation, and provides a concrete example for many difficult and general manipulation problems.
Time-optimal Vehicle Trajectories - What's the fastest way to drive a mobile robot?

Recent publications [View all 47 publications]


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