Neuromorphic force-control in an industrial task: validating energy and latency benefits

Camilo Amaya, Evan Eames, Gintautas Palinauskas, Alexander Perzylo, Yulia Sandamirskaya and Axel von Arnim

IEEE/RSJ International Conference on Intelligent Robots and Systems (IROS),

October 2024 · Abu Dhabi, UAE

abstract

As robots become smarter and more ubiquitous, optimizing the power consumption of intelligent compute becomes imperative towards ensuring the sustainability of technological advancements. Neuromorphic computing hardware makes use of biologically inspired neural architectures to achieve energy and latency improvements compared to conventional von Neumann computing architectures. Applying these benefits to robots has been demonstrated in several works in the field of neurorobotics, typically on relatively simple control tasks. Here, we introduce an example of neuromorphic computing applied to the real-world industrial task of object insertion. We trained a spiking neural network (SNN) to perform force-torque feedback control using a reinforcement learning approach in simulation. We then ported the SNN to the Intel neuromorphic research chip Loihi interfaced with a KUKA robotic arm. At inference time we show latency competitive with current CPU/GPU architectures, and one order of magnitude less energy usage in comparison to traditional low-energy edge-hardware. We offer this example as a proof of concept implementation of a neuromoprhic controller in a real-world robotic setting, highlighting the benefits of neuromorphic hardware for the development of intelligent controllers for robots.

subject terms: nc, peng