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Neural reservoir control of a soft bio-hybrid arm

Published: March 12, 2025 | arXiv ID: 2503.09477v1

By: Noel Naughton , Arman Tekinalp , Keshav Shivam and more

Potential Business Impact:

Controls squishy robot arms using brain-like chips.

Business Areas:
Embedded Systems Hardware, Science and Engineering, Software

A long-standing engineering problem, the control of soft robots is difficult because of their highly non-linear, heterogeneous, anisotropic, and distributed nature. Here, bridging engineering and biology, a neural reservoir is employed for the dynamic control of a bio-hybrid model arm made of multiple muscle-tendon groups enveloping an elastic spine. We show how the use of reservoirs facilitates simultaneous control and self-modeling across a set of challenging tasks, outperforming classic neural network approaches. Further, by implementing a spiking reservoir on neuromorphic hardware, energy efficiency is achieved, with nearly two-orders of magnitude improvement relative to standard CPUs, with implications for the on-board control of untethered, small-scale soft robots.

Country of Origin
🇺🇸 United States

Page Count
12 pages

Category
Computer Science:
Robotics