Control of Legged Robots using Model Predictive Optimized Path Integral
Hossein Keshavarz, Alejandro Ramirez-Serrano, Majid Khadiv
- Year
- 2025
- Access
- Open access
Abstract
Legged robots possess a unique ability to traverse rough terrains and navigate cluttered environments, making them well-suited for complex, real-world unstructured scenarios. However, such robots have not yet achieved the same level as seen in natural systems. Recently, sampling-based predictive controllers have demonstrated particularly promising results. This paper investigates a sampling-based model predictive strategy combining model predictive path integral (MPPI) with cross-entropy (CE) and covariance matrix adaptation (CMA) methods to generate real-time whole-body motions for legged robots across multiple scenarios. The results show that combining the benefits of MPPI, CE and CMA, namely using model predictive optimized path integral (MPOPI), demonstrates greater sample efficiency, enabling robots to attain superior locomotion results using fewer samples when compared to typical MPPI algorithms. Extensive simulation experiments in multiple scenarios on a quadruped robot show that MPOPI can be used as an anytime control strategy, increasing locomotion capabilities at each iteration.
Keywords
Related papers
Trajectory tracking control for 6WID/4WIS UGV via nonlinear sliding mode-model predictive control with adaptive following steering and dynamic-static constraints
Shengyang Lu, Guanpeng Chen, Lijing Zhao +2 more
Robotics and Autonomous Systems · 2026
Bioinspired underwater robotics: Advances across the materials, design, control, and applications
Dilip Muchhala, Pramod Kumar Maurya, Adarsh Raut +3 more
Robotics and Autonomous Systems · 2026
Modeling and control of a rigid–soft hybrid-link humanoid robot
Zewen He, Taiki Ishigaki, Ko Yamamoto
Robotics and Autonomous Systems · 2026
Artificial pushing adaptive coordinated control for the human-exoskeleton-walker system
Xinhao Zhang, Chen Yang, Chaobin Zou +4 more
Robotics and Autonomous Systems · 2026