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MiniBEE: A New Form Factor for Compact Bimanual Dexterity

Published: October 2, 2025 | arXiv ID: 2510.01603v1

By: Sharfin Islam , Zewen Chen , Zhanpeng He and more

Potential Business Impact:

Robots use two small arms to do more tasks.

Business Areas:
Robotics Hardware, Science and Engineering, Software

Bimanual robot manipulators can achieve impressive dexterity, but typically rely on two full six- or seven- degree-of-freedom arms so that paired grippers can coordinate effectively. This traditional framework increases system complexity while only exploiting a fraction of the overall workspace for dexterous interaction. We introduce the MiniBEE (Miniature Bimanual End-effector), a compact system in which two reduced-mobility arms (3+ DOF each) are coupled into a kinematic chain that preserves full relative positioning between grippers. To guide our design, we formulate a kinematic dexterity metric that enlarges the dexterous workspace while keeping the mechanism lightweight and wearable. The resulting system supports two complementary modes: (i) wearable kinesthetic data collection with self-tracked gripper poses, and (ii) deployment on a standard robot arm, extending dexterity across its entire workspace. We present kinematic analysis and design optimization methods for maximizing dexterous range, and demonstrate an end-to-end pipeline in which wearable demonstrations train imitation learning policies that perform robust, real-world bimanual manipulation.

Country of Origin
🇺🇸 United States

Page Count
8 pages

Category
Computer Science:
Robotics