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Mobility and manipulation
Brock, O.; Park, J.; Toussaint, M. (2016). Mobility and manipulation, in: Siciliano, B. et al. Springer handbook of robotics. pp. 1007-1036. https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-32552-1_40
In: Siciliano, B.; Khatib, O. (Ed.) (2016). Springer handbook of robotics. Second edition. Springer Verlag: Berlin. ISBN 978-3-319-32550-7; e-ISBN 978-3-319-32552-1. LXXVI, 2227 pp. https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-32552-1, more

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  • Brock, O.
  • Park, J.
  • Toussaint, M.

Abstract
    Mobile manipulation requires the integration of methodologies from all aspects of robotics. Instead of tackling each aspect in isolation, mobile manipulation research exploits their interdependence to solve challenging problems. As a result, novel views of long-standing problems emerge. In this chapter, we present these emerging views in the areas of grasping, control, motion generation, learning, and perception. All of these areas must address the shared challenges of high-dimensionality, uncertainty, and task variability. The section on grasping and manipulation describes a trend towards actively leveraging contact and physical and dynamic interactions between hand, object, and environment. Research in control addresses the challenges of appropriately coupling mobility and manipulation. The field of motion generation increasingly blurs the boundaries between control and planning, leading to task-consistent motion in high-dimensional configuration spaces, even in dynamic and partially unknown environments. A key challenge of learning for mobile manipulation consists of identifying the appropriate priors, and we survey recent learning approaches to perception, grasping, motion, and manipulation. Finally, a discussion of promising methods in perception shows how concepts and methods from navigation and active perception are applied.

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