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effective. |
The criteria for good PCG perturbations are related to the criteria for suitable RVs, |
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discussed in Section 3.5. In general, the following should hold:
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model of the discrete system can be constructed. |
The inverse of this model is used to |
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determine the appropriate scaling factors for each perturbation for each step. |
For |
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They are shown in Figure 3.14. Items (c) and (d) show the pose table form of the perturbations |
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which are scaled and added to a base PCG pose table such as that of Figure 3.7 (b). |
In our case, |
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each of the chosen PCG perturbations affects a single DOF. |
Unity-valued perturbations are used |
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so that the scalar multiplier units are in degrees. |
Each perturbation is applied to all poses (i.e. all |
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states) of the related step, left or right. perturbation. |
This provides a smoother and more effective control |
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Figure 3.14 illustrates the hip pitch and roll perturbations for a body in free space. |
When applied |
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to a body in contact with the ground, the perturbations primarily affect the biped as shown in Figure 3.15. Applying a stance hip pitch perturbation varies the torso angle in the sagittal plane. Applying a stance hip roll perturbation varies the torso angle in the coronal plane. |