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Extending FABRIK with Obstacle Avoidance for Solving the Inverse Kinematics Problem
Author(s) -
Songqiao Tao,
Huajin Tao,
Yumeng Yang
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
journal of robotics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.303
H-Index - 14
eISSN - 1687-9619
pISSN - 1687-9600
DOI - 10.1155/2021/5568702
Subject(s) - inverse kinematics , computer science , kinematics , robotics , obstacle avoidance , artificial intelligence , position (finance) , heuristic , obstacle , forward kinematics , rotation (mathematics) , inverse , robot , computer vision , mathematics , geometry , mobile robot , physics , finance , classical mechanics , political science , law , economics
Inverse kinematics (IK) has been extensively applied in the areas of robotics, computer animation, ergonomics, and gaming. Typically, IK determines the joint configurations of a robot model and achieves a desired end-effector position in robotics. Since forward and backward teaching inverse kinematics (FABRIK) is a forward and backward iterative method that finds updated joint positions by locating a point on a line instead of using angle rotations or matrices, it has the advantages of fast convergence, low computational cost, and visualizing realistic poses. However, the manipulators usually work in a complex environment. So, the kinematic chains are easy to produce the interference with their surrounding scenarios. To resolve the above mentioned problem, a two-step obstacle avoidance technology is proposed to extend the basic FABRIK in this study.(e first step is a heuristic method that locates the updated linkage bar, the root joint, and the target position in a line, so that the interference can be eliminated in most cases. In the second step, multiple random rotation strategies are adopted to eliminate the interference that has not been eliminated in the first step. Experimental results have shown that the extending FABRIK has the obstacle avoidance ability.

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