机器人手采摘黑莓比人类更有效率。
Robot hand could harvest blackberries better than humans

原始链接: https://news.uark.edu/articles/79750/robot-hand-could-harvest-blackberries-better-than-humans

## 机器人夹爪旨在解决采摘浆果的劳动力短缺问题 阿肯色大学的研究人员开发并获得了专利的“软体机器人夹爪”,旨在采摘娇嫩的黑莓,仅在阿肯色州,这每年就是一个价值2430万美元的产业。面对日益严重的农场劳动力限制,由安东尼·冈德曼领导的阿肯色大学团队设计了一种受郁金香花瓣开合启发的三个手指的夹爪。 关键在于其柔软、柔韧的材料和集成的力传感器,可防止浆果受损——这是市场销售能力和美国农业部标准的主要问题。研究人员研究了经验丰富的采摘者,以确定采摘所需的最佳力度。 虽然计算机视觉和定位系统仍在开发中,但这种机器人手有望为这项特定任务提供比人工采摘者更高的稳定性和潜在*更优越*的性能。除了黑莓之外,该技术还可以应用于其他软质水果,如覆盆子,甚至可以帮助行动不便的人。阿肯色大学正在积极探索这种夹爪的潜力及其对阿肯色州经济的贡献。

## 机器人黑莓采摘:早期阶段与挑战 阿肯色大学的一个团队正在开发一种用于采摘黑莓的机器人手,有可能超越人类的效率。这种手采用了受人类采摘启发的柔性抓握,并使用力传感器来模拟成熟度检测。然而,该项目仍处于早期阶段。 目前,最大的障碍是开发必要的计算机视觉和定位技术,以*找到*和*摘取*植物上的果实。专家强调,成功的农业机器人不仅需要创新的夹具,还需要成本效益和耐用性——包括能够承受恶劣的农场条件(例如高压水枪冲洗!)。 讨论强调了植物育种对商业上可行水果的重要性,以及自动化解决劳动力短缺和降低采摘成本的必要性。虽然前景可观,但该技术在走出实验室并广泛应用于农业之前,仍面临重大挑战。许多评论员指出,大学新闻稿往往夸大进展,而实际应用还有很多年。
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原文
Mechanical engineer Anthony Gunderman holds a prototype of the robotic gripper for picking blackberries.
Photo by Chieko Hara

Mechanical engineer Anthony Gunderman holds a prototype of the robotic gripper for picking blackberries.

Fresh, frozen and processed berries are a multi-billion-dollar business in America. In Arkansas alone, fresh-market blackberries contribute $24.3 million each year to the state’s economy. But these delicate blackberries sold in clamshells at supermarkets must be picked by hand, and farm labor has been limited in recent years. A new berry-picking robot gripper developed at the U of A could give growers a high-tech replacement for limited labor availability.

The U.S patent was issued in April to the U of A for the invention “Soft Robotic Gripper for Berry Harvesting.” Technology Ventures, part of the Division of Research and Innovation, secured the patent.

The device was developed by Anthony Gunderman, at the time a Ph.D. student and now an assistant professor in U of A’s Department of Mechanical Engineering, with Yue Chen, a former U of A professor now at Georgia Tech, and Jeremy Collins, then a U of A undergraduate engineering student.

Inspired by Nature

The robotic gripper has three “fingers,” each made of a soft, pliable material. When a “tendon” — in this case a guitar string — is pulled, the fingers retract.

Building robots from pliable materials is known as soft robotics, an approach first used in the 1960s. When designing soft robots, developers often look to nature for models, a process known as biomimicry. For the berry-picking hand, the researchers were inspired by the design of a tulip.

“I was inspired by the way a tulip flower opens and closes when the sunlight hits it,” Gunderman said.

On the tip of each finger is a force sensor, which makes sure the gripper can pluck the berry without crushing it. Roughly handled blackberries can be damaged at harvest or turn red after harvest, a condition called red drupelet reversion. Both are undesirable attributes for consumers. The USDA will also reject fresh blackberries with too much damage or too many red drupelets.

To determine the force needed to pick blackberries without damage, , an associate professor in food science with the Arkansas Agricultural Experiment Station, the research arm of the U of A System’s statewide Division of Agriculture.

The team attached sensors to the fingertips of experienced blackberry pickers and measured how much force they applied while harvesting a berry.

Before the robot can be deployed on farms, the computer vision and positioning technologies that would let it find and reach for berries on the plant still need to be developed.

Today, heartier fruits like blueberries and pears are commonly harvested by machines. And rougher automated harvesting machines are used for blackberries that will be frozen or processed.

Better than a human

The human hand can adapt to many tasks. But Gunderman thinks one day the robotic hand could be better at picking blackberries.

“When we’re talking about one specific task, it is certainly the case that you could design something that is better than the human hand for that one specific task,” he said.

The robotic gripper could also be more consistent than human workers.

“Depending on if you have a brand-new hand harvester or someone who’s been doing it for decades, you will get vastly different berry quality,” Gunderman said.

The gripper could also be used to pick other soft fruits, such as raspberries.

The robotic gripper was tested on a range of objects, from hard items like a jar of pears and a can of beans to soft, flexible objects like a bag of potato chips and a T-shirt. The soft gripper, Gunderman said, might also be a tool for people with limited mobility due to injury or age.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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