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  4. Large-scale automated investigation of free-falling paper shapes via iterative physical experimentation
 
research article

Large-scale automated investigation of free-falling paper shapes via iterative physical experimentation

Howison, Toby
•
Hughes, Josie  
•
Iida, Fumiya
2020
Nature Machine Intelligence

Free-falling paper shapes exhibit rich, complex and varied behaviours that are extremely challenging to model analytically. Physical experimentation aids in system understanding, but is time-consuming, sensitive to initial conditions and reliant on subjective visual behavioural classification. In this study, robotics, computer vision and machine learning are used to autonomously fabricate, drop, analyse and classify the behaviours of hundreds of shapes. The system is validated by reproducing results for falling discs, which exhibit four falling styles: tumbling, chaotic, steady and periodic. A previously determined mapping from a non-dimensional parameter space to behaviour groups is shown to be consistent with these new experiments for tumbling and chaotic behaviours. However, steady or periodic behaviours are observed in previously unseen areas of the parameter space. More complex hexagon, square and cross shapes are investigated, showing that the non-dimensional parameter space generalizes to these shapes. The system highlights the potential of robotics for the investigation of complex physical systems, of which falling paper is one example, and provides a template for future investigation of such systems. © 2020, The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature Limited.

  • Details
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Type
research article
DOI
10.1038/s42256-019-0135-z
Author(s)
Howison, Toby
Hughes, Josie  
Iida, Fumiya
Date Issued

2020

Publisher

Nature Research

Published in
Nature Machine Intelligence
Volume

2

Issue

1

Start page

68

End page

75

Subjects

Computer Science, Artificial Intelligence

•

Computer Science, Interdisciplinary Applications

•

Robotics

•

Automated investigations

•

Chaotic behaviour

•

Complex physical systems

•

Initial conditions

•

Non-dimensional parameters

•

Parameter spaces

•

Physical experimentations

•

Computer vision

Note

We acknowledge funding from EPSRC RG92738 and The Mathworks Ltd.

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

OTHER

EPFL units
CREATE-LAB  
Available on Infoscience
August 9, 2022
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/189856
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