On the Relevance of Grasp Metrics for Predicting Grasp Success

Carlos Rubert1, Daniel Kappler2, Antonio Morales1, Jeannette Bohg3, Stefan Schaal4

  • 1Universitat Jaume I
  • 2X (Google)
  • 3Max-Planck Institute for Intelligent Systems
  • 4MPI Intelligent Systems & University of Southern California

Details

10:45 - 11:00 | Mon 25 Sep | Room 122 | MoAT7.2

Session: Grasping I

Abstract

We aim to reliably predict whether a grasp on a known object is successful before it is executed in the real world. There is an entire suite of grasp metrics that has already been developed which rely on precisely known contact points between object and hand. However, it remains unclear whether and how they may be combined into a general purpose grasp stability predictor. In this paper, we analyze these questions by leveraging a large scale database of simulated grasps on a wide variety of objects. For each grasp, we compute the value of seven metrics. Each grasp is annotated by human subjects with ground truth stability labels. Given this data set, we train several classification methods to find out whether there is some underlying, non-trivial structure in the data that is difficult to model manually but can be learned. Quantitative and qualitative results show the complexity of the prediction problem. We found that a good prediction performance critically depends on using a combination of metrics as input features. Furthermore, non-parametric and non-linear classifiers best capture the structure in the data.