Achieving a Fitts Law Relationship for Visual Guided Reaching
نویسنده
چکیده
In order to take advantage of the top speed of manipulators, vision can not be tightly integrated into the motion control loop. Past visual servo control systems have performed satisfactorily with this constraint, however it can be shown that the task execution time can be reduced if the vision system is de-coupled from the low level motor control system. For reaching, there is a trade-o between the accuracy of a motion and the time required to execute a motion. In studies of human motor control this tradeo is quanti ed by Fitts Law, a relationship between the motion time, the target distance, and the target width. These studies suggest that vision is not used tightly within the control loop, i.e. as a sensor that is servo-ed on, but rather vision is used to determine where the reaching target is and whether target has been reached successfully. Through a simple robotic example we demonstrate that a similar trade o exists between motion accuracy and the motion execution time for visual guided robot reaching motions.
منابع مشابه
Computational motor control: feedback and accuracy.
Speed/accuracy trade-off is a ubiquitous phenomenon in motor behaviour, which has been ascribed to the presence of signal-dependent noise (SDN) in motor commands. Although this explanation can provide a quantitative account of many aspects of motor variability, including Fitts' law, the fact that this law is frequently violated, e.g. during the acquisition of new motor skills, remains unexplain...
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