Humanoid robots, robotic systems with a human-like body structure, have the potential of tackling various real-world tasks that are currently being completed by humans. In recent years, many robotics researchers and computer scientists have been trying to broaden these robots’ capabilities and improve how they move in their surroundings.
A research team at Amazon Frontier AI & Robotics (FAR) and University of California Berkeley (UC Berkeley) recently introduced perceptive humanoid parkour (PHP), a framework that could allow humanoid robots to move with remarkable agility, running, jumping and climbing over obstacles in urban or natural environments. Their proposed approach, outlined in a paper published on the arXiv preprint server, entails training computational models on recordings of humans engaging in parkour, a popular urban sport that allows practitioners to rapidly navigate environments using their agility and body strength.
“While recent advances in humanoid locomotion have achieved stable walking on varied terrains, capturing the agility and adaptivity of highly dynamic human motions remains an open challenge,” wrote Zhen Wu, Xiaoyu Huang and their colleagues in their paper.









