Switching from one smartphone to another is mostly a smooth procedure. You log into your accounts and your apps, preferences, and contacts should sync to the new hardware. But in the world of robotics, swapping an old robotic arm for a newer model has meant setting everything up from scratch.

To fix that, a team of researchers at the Swiss ร‰cole Polytechnique Fรฉdรฉrale de Lausanne (EPFL) has developed what they call Kinematic Intelligence, a framework that makes switching robots work more like switching smartphones. They describe their system in a recent Science Robotics paper.

Demonstrating skills

For years, roboticists have been working on getting robots to learn from demonstrationโ€”teaching them new skills by showing them what to do, rather than writing lines of code. The idea is to remotely control or physically guide the robotโ€™s arm to teach it a task like wiping a table, stacking boxes, or welding a car component. The problem is that most of these taught skills end up tied to the specific robot the training was done with.

But robotics is advancing quickly. โ€œThe robots have different designs, and nowadays there are new designs being proposedโ€”that brings its own set of challenges,โ€ said Sthithpragya Gupta, a roboticist at EPFL and lead author of the study. If a new robot has slightly longer links, a different joint orientation, or a more complex configuration, that learned behavior instantly breaks and the new robot will likely flail, freeze, or crash if attempting it.

โ€œWith new designs come different capabilities and constraints,โ€ said Durgesh Haribhau Salunkhe, an EPFL roboticist and co-author of the study. โ€œThe problem is to adapt to these constraints and capabilitiesโ€”to faithfully replicate the actions demonstrated by a human.โ€ Today, making the leap from one robot body to another usually means starting from scratch and retraining the whole system.



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