Micro well-plates are commonly used apparatus in chemical and biological experiments that are a few centimeters in thickness with wells in them. The task we aim to solve is to place (insert) them onto a well-plate holder with grooves a few millimeters in height. Our insertion task has the following facets: 1) There is uncertainty in the detection of the position and pose of the well-plate and well-plate holder, 2) the accuracy required is in the order of millimeter to sub-millimeter, 3) the well-plate holder is not fastened, and moves with external force, 4) the groove is shallow, and 5) the width of the groove is small. Addressing these challenges, we developed a) an adaptive finger gripper with accurate detection of finger position (for (1)), b) grasped object pose estimation using tactile sensors (for (1)), c) a method to insert the well-plate into the target holder by sliding the well-plate while maintaining contact with the edge of the holder (for (2-4)), and d) estimating the orientation of the edge and aligning the well-plate so that the holder does not move when maintaining contact with the edge (for (5)). We show a significantly high success rate on the insertion task of the well-plate, even though under added noise. An accompanying video is available at the following link: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1UxyJ3XIxqXPnHcpfw-PYs5T5oYQxoc6i/view?usp=sharing
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