But from the title I was hoping to see a "skateboard with legs" instead. Imagine a little eight-legged horse for your feet, you know?
I think most inanimate objects would fall off a skateboard when pushed down steps, so it’s an impressive display of balance and tool-use in my opinion!
>Our approach incorporates a beta policy distribution and a multi-critic architecture to model contact-guided motions, exemplified by a challenging quadrupedal robot skateboard task
I'm not an expert on this but maybe someone here can explain it a bit about a beta policy distribution and a multi-critic architecture and how come that is good to model contact-guided motions?
it's easier on 4 legs
But I just can't get over how cute the little fucker is. Little robodog skateboarding around living his best life.
We use different LED lights to indicate transitions between dynamic modes
in the automata. Similar to segmentation techniques in computer vision,
the learned hybrid modes can help us analyze motion patterns more
systematically, improve interpretability in decision-making, and refine
control strategies for enhanced adaptability.but the two-legged scooby-doo windup is amazing!
What are we doing here?