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Peg-in-Hole Assembly: A Challenge for Robot Learning

Distinguished Research Seminar Series

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  • Date

    29 Apr 2026

  • Organiser

    Department of Industrial and Systems Engineering, PolyU

  • Time

    09:15 - 10:00

  • Venue

    Z211  

Speaker

Prof. Yu Wang

Remarks

If you have enquiries regarding E-certificate after the seminar, please contact david.kuo@polyu.edu.hk.

20260429poster

Summary

In recent years we have seen rapid advancements in the development of robot learning in hand grasping and even fine manipulation. Intelligent robotic manipulation requires and leverages a robot hand to achieve autonomous and rich physical interactions with the surrounding environment. Yet, robotic manipulation is not just about arm and hand motions. Contact is the true heart of manipulation. Precision peg-in-hole assembly is such a challenging problem in robotic learning of fine manipulation. The problem gets at the very heart of manipulation, providing insights that apply across almost all manipulation tasks, whether by human or robot. This presentation will give an overview of the trend in the development of robotic learning with dexterous and versatile capability for grasping and adaptive manipulation. In this perspective, we argue that the multi-modal manipulation capabilities of human-centered robots are essential for a feasible large-scale deployment of the future robotic technology with a potential of commercial success.

Keynote Speaker

Prof. Yu Wang

Prof. Yu Wang

Dean and Chair Professor
School of Engineering
Great Bay University, China

Michael Yu Wang is a Chair Professor and the Founding Dean of the School of Engineering of the Great Bay University. He has served on the engineering faculty at University of Maryland, Chinese University of Hong Kong, National University of Singapore, Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, and Monash University. He has numerous professional honors–Kayamori Best Paper Award of 2001 IEEE International Conference on Robotics and Automation, the Compliant Mechanisms Award-Theory of ASME 31st Mechanisms and Robotics Conference in 2007, Research Excellence Award (2008) of CUHK, and ASME Design Automation Award (2013). He was the Editor-in-Chief of IEEE Trans. on Automation Science and Engineering, and served as an Associate Editor of IEEE Trans. on Robotics and Automation and ASME Journal of Manufacturing Science and Engineering. He is a Fellow of ASME, HKIE and IEEE. He received his Ph.D. degree from Carnegie Mellon University.

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