Ebook: Remote Control Robotics
Author: Craig Sayers (auth.)
- Tags: Mechanical Engineering, Artificial Intelligence (incl. Robotics), Control Robotics Mechatronics, Computer Graphics
- Year: 1999
- Publisher: Springer-Verlag New York
- Edition: 1
- Language: English
- pdf
Increasingly, robots are being used in environments inhospitable to humans such as the deep ocean, inside nuclear reactors, and in deep space. Such robots are controlled by remote links to human operators who may be close by or thousands of miles away. The techniques used to control these robots is the subject of this book. The author begins with a basic introduction to robot control and then considers the important problems to be overcome: delays or noisy control lines, feedback and response information, and predictive displays. Readers are assumed to have a basic understanding of robotics though this may be their first exposure to the subject of telerobotics. Professional engineers and roboticists will find this an invaluable introduction to this subject.
Increasingly, robots are being used in environments inhospitable to humans such as the deep ocean, inside nuclear reactors, and in deep space. Such robots are controlled by remote links to human operators who may be close by or thousands of miles away. The techniques used to control these robots is the subject of this book. The author begins with a basic introduction to robot control and then considers the important problems to be overcome: delays or noisy control lines, feedback and response information, and predictive displays. Readers are assumed to have a basic understanding of robotics though this may be their first exposure to the subject of telerobotics. Professional engineers and roboticists will find this an invaluable introduction to this subject.
Increasingly, robots are being used in environments inhospitable to humans such as the deep ocean, inside nuclear reactors, and in deep space. Such robots are controlled by remote links to human operators who may be close by or thousands of miles away. The techniques used to control these robots is the subject of this book. The author begins with a basic introduction to robot control and then considers the important problems to be overcome: delays or noisy control lines, feedback and response information, and predictive displays. Readers are assumed to have a basic understanding of robotics though this may be their first exposure to the subject of telerobotics. Professional engineers and roboticists will find this an invaluable introduction to this subject.
Content:
Front Matter....Pages iii-xix
Introduction....Pages 1-8
Basics....Pages 9-24
Historical Perspective....Pages 25-40
Remote Control....Pages 41-50
Teleprogramming....Pages 51-58
A Natural Operator Interface....Pages 59-72
Synthetic Fixtures....Pages 73-93
Visual Imagery....Pages 95-115
Expecting the Unexpected....Pages 117-124
Command Generation and Interpretation....Pages 125-137
Results and Observations....Pages 139-163
Discussion....Pages 165-171
Conclusions....Pages 173-175
Back Matter....Pages 177-224
Increasingly, robots are being used in environments inhospitable to humans such as the deep ocean, inside nuclear reactors, and in deep space. Such robots are controlled by remote links to human operators who may be close by or thousands of miles away. The techniques used to control these robots is the subject of this book. The author begins with a basic introduction to robot control and then considers the important problems to be overcome: delays or noisy control lines, feedback and response information, and predictive displays. Readers are assumed to have a basic understanding of robotics though this may be their first exposure to the subject of telerobotics. Professional engineers and roboticists will find this an invaluable introduction to this subject.
Content:
Front Matter....Pages iii-xix
Introduction....Pages 1-8
Basics....Pages 9-24
Historical Perspective....Pages 25-40
Remote Control....Pages 41-50
Teleprogramming....Pages 51-58
A Natural Operator Interface....Pages 59-72
Synthetic Fixtures....Pages 73-93
Visual Imagery....Pages 95-115
Expecting the Unexpected....Pages 117-124
Command Generation and Interpretation....Pages 125-137
Results and Observations....Pages 139-163
Discussion....Pages 165-171
Conclusions....Pages 173-175
Back Matter....Pages 177-224
....