Fetch rewards university team in manipulation challenge
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MONTREAL – Georgia Tech won first prize in the inaugural Fetch Robotics FetchIt! Mobile Manipulation Challenge, held this week at the IEEE Conference on Robotics and Automation (ICRA) in Montreal. The competition was designed to advance the state of technology for applying mobile manipulators, which are autonomous mobile robots (AMRs) fitted with robotic arms, for use in manufacturing and related applications.
The FetchIt! Challenge attracted teams from leading universities, who were tasked with using a Fetch Mobile Manipulator robot to navigate to stations in a work cell where they picked up items with the arm, inserted them into a machining tool, placed the machined items into kits, transported the finished kits to an inspection station, and then to a drop-off location. This is the first competition that encompasses the full range of activities that are commonly found in manufacturing environments.
Georgia Tech successfully assembled three kits in thirty-nine minutes, earning a prize package that included a Fetch Mobile Manipulation Research Robot – a US$100K value – along with additional prizes from co-sponsors EandM, SCHUNK and SICK AG.
“We’re very excited to have won the FetchIt! challenge,” said Georgia Tech’s Sonia Chernova.
“It has allowed us to validate our research code in a complex domain. We can’t wait to continue our work with our newest Fetch robot.”
FetchIt! Challenge participants included:
Autonomous mobile robots are seeing rapid adoption in multiple applications, particularly for material movement tasks in warehouses and factories. This has fueled growing interest in using AMRs equipped with robotic arms – so called Mobile Manipulators – for applications that combine autonomous transport with robotic arms that can grasp and manipulate objects. While conceptually simple, combining autonomous mobility with robotic arm activity is extremely challenging, requiring complex interaction between the robot navigation, machine vision, arm operation and safety systems.
The FetchIt! competition focused on teams autonomously completing combined manipulation and navigation tasks. The goal was to assemble a kit from six objects obtained from stations around the designated arena. Designed to mimic a common machine-tending process in manufacturing, the objects were picked from bins and then placed in a kit and transported to a drop-off location. All teams used a stock Fetch Mobile Manipulator, which is the most widely deployed mobile manipulation robot, deployed at over fifty of the world’s leading academic and commercial robotic research centers.
“I’d like to congratulate all the teams for their accomplishments during the course of this challenge,” said Russell Toris, director of robotics at Fetch Robotics.
“When setting out to create this challenge, we knew we wanted to keep it grounded to a real-word scenario. Interacting with machinery that is designed to be used by humans is no easy task. Piece-picking, kitting, and countless other tasks are going to require state-of-the-art perception, motion planning, navigation, and safety all seamlessly working together. The teams’ performance this week indicate that they represent some of the world’s leading experts in these skills.”
In addition to Fetch Robotics, additional sponsors included EandM, Schunk, SICK, and The Construct.
First Place: Georgia Tech
Prize: Fetch Mobile Manipulation Research Robot, MRS1000 4-layer LiDAR sensor (1) provided by SICK and EandM, along with 7,000 Schunk Bucks
Second Place: University of Massachusetts Lowell
Prize: MRS1000 4-layer LiDAR sensor (1) and TiM561 LiDAR laser scanner (1) provided by SICK and EandM, along with 5,000 Schunk Bucks
Additional Prizes: TiM561 LiDAR laser scanner (1) provided by SICK and EandM, for all entrants
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