Adaptive robot morphology and behavioral control policy through responsive composite materials
· Invited
Abstract
Robots generally excel at specific tasks in structured environments, but lack the versatility and adaptability required to interact with the real world. In this talk, I will introduce several soft robot platforms that can adapt both their shape and behavior to accommodate different tasks or environments. While actuation alone may temporarily change a robot’s shape, I will show that the ability to change resting shape is an advantage of soft robots, and that shape control can offset computationally-expensive tasks such as gait changes and obstacle avoidance. The focus will be on the responsive composites that enable these functional capabilities, including variable stiffness materials for move-and-hold shapeshifting applications, switchable stretchability materials for adaptive trajectories of volumetrically-expanding actuators, and stretchable circuitry for material-embedded computation.
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Presenters
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Rebecca Kramer-Bottiglio
- Yale University