Self-Mixing Laser Interferometry: In Search of an Ambient Noise-Resilient Alternative to Acoustic Sensing
Self-Mixing Laser Interferometry: In Search of an Ambient Noise-Resilient Alternative to Acoustic Sensing
Self-mixing interferometry (SMI) has been lauded for its sensitivity in detecting microvibrations, while requiring no physical contact with its target. Microvibrations, i.e., sounds, have recently been used as a salient indicator of extrinsic contact in robotic manipulation. In previous work, we presented a robotic fingertip using SMI for extrinsic contact sensing as an ambient-noise-resilient alternative to acoustic sensing. Here, we extend the validation experiments to the frequency domain. We find that for broadband ambient noise, SMI still outperforms acoustic sensing, but the difference is less pronounced than in time-domain analyses. For targeted noise disturbances, analogous to multiple robots simultaneously collecting data for the same task, SMI is still the clear winner. Lastly, we show how motor noise affects SMI sensing more so than acoustic sensing, and that a higher SMI readout frequency is important for future work. Design and data files are available at https://github.com/RemkoPr/icra2025-SMI-tactile-sensing.
Remko Proesmans、Thomas Lips、Francis wyffels
光电子技术自动化技术、自动化技术设备
Remko Proesmans,Thomas Lips,Francis wyffels.Self-Mixing Laser Interferometry: In Search of an Ambient Noise-Resilient Alternative to Acoustic Sensing[EB/OL].(2025-04-18)[2025-05-04].https://arxiv.org/abs/2504.13711.点此复制
评论