Home /Research /Versatile graceful degradation framework for bio-inspired proprioception with redundant soft sensors
LEARNING

Versatile graceful degradation framework for bio-inspired proprioception with redundant soft sensors

Taku Sugiyama, Kyo Kutsuzawa, Dai Owaki, Elijah Almanzor, Fumiya Iida, Mitsuhiro Hayashibe

Year
2025
Citations
2
Access
Open access

Abstract

Reliable proprioception and feedback from soft sensors are crucial for enabling soft robots to function intelligently in real-world environments. Nevertheless, soft sensors are fragile and are susceptible to various damage sources in such environments. Some researchers have utilized redundant configuration, where healthy sensors compensate instantaneously for lost ones to maintain proprioception accuracy. However, achieving consistently reliable proprioception under diverse sensor degradation remains a challenge. This paper proposes a novel framework for graceful degradation in redundant soft sensor systems, incorporating a stochastic Long Short-Term Memory (LSTM) and a Time-Delay Feedforward Neural Network (TDFNN). The LSTM estimates readings from healthy sensors to compare them with actual data. Then, statistically abnormal readings are zeroed out. The TDFNN receives the processed sensor readings to perform proprioception. Simulation experiments with a musculoskeletal leg that contains 40 nonlinear soft sensors demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed framework. Results show that the knee angle proprioception accuracy is retained across four distinct degradation scenarios. Notably, the mean proprioception error increases by less than 1.91°(1.36%) when <mml:math xmlns:mml="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML" id="m1"><mml:mrow><mml:mn>30</mml:mn><mml:mi>%</mml:mi></mml:mrow></mml:math> of the sensors are degraded. These results suggest that the proposed framework enhances the reliability of soft sensor proprioception, thereby improving the robustness of soft robots in real-world applications.

Keywords

Computer scienceDegradation (telecommunications)ProprioceptionSoft roboticsDistributed computingHuman–computer interactionArtificial intelligencePhysical medicine and rehabilitationTelecommunicationsRobot

Related papers

Browse all LEARNING papers