8,044 research outputs found
Dynamic Modelling and Adaptive Traction Control for Mobile Robots
Mobile robots have received a great deal of research in recent years. A
significant amount of research has been published in many aspects related to
mobile robots. Most of the research is devoted to design and develop some
control techniques for robot motion and path planning. A large number of
researchers have used kinematic models to develop motion control strategy for
mobile robots. Their argument and assumption that these models are valid if the
robot has low speed, low acceleration and light load. However, dynamic
modelling of mobile robots is very important as they are designed to travel at
higher speed and perform heavy duty work. This paper presents and discusses a
new approach to develop a dynamic model and control strategy for wheeled mobile
robot which I modelled as a rigid body that roles on two wheels and a castor.
The motion control strategy consists of two levels. The first level is dealing
with the dynamic of the system and denoted as Low level controller. The second
level is developed to take care of path planning and trajectory generation
Artificial Intelligence and Systems Theory: Applied to Cooperative Robots
This paper describes an approach to the design of a population of cooperative
robots based on concepts borrowed from Systems Theory and Artificial
Intelligence. The research has been developed under the SocRob project, carried
out by the Intelligent Systems Laboratory at the Institute for Systems and
Robotics - Instituto Superior Tecnico (ISR/IST) in Lisbon. The acronym of the
project stands both for "Society of Robots" and "Soccer Robots", the case study
where we are testing our population of robots. Designing soccer robots is a
very challenging problem, where the robots must act not only to shoot a ball
towards the goal, but also to detect and avoid static (walls, stopped robots)
and dynamic (moving robots) obstacles. Furthermore, they must cooperate to
defeat an opposing team. Our past and current research in soccer robotics
includes cooperative sensor fusion for world modeling, object recognition and
tracking, robot navigation, multi-robot distributed task planning and
coordination, including cooperative reinforcement learning in cooperative and
adversarial environments, and behavior-based architectures for real time task
execution of cooperating robot teams
Stabilization Control of the Differential Mobile Robot Using Lyapunov Function and Extended Kalman Filter
This paper presents the design of a control model to navigate the
differential mobile robot to reach the desired destination from an arbitrary
initial pose. The designed model is divided into two stages: the state
estimation and the stabilization control. In the state estimation, an extended
Kalman filter is employed to optimally combine the information from the system
dynamics and measurements. Two Lyapunov functions are constructed that allow a
hybrid feedback control law to execute the robot movements. The asymptotical
stability and robustness of the closed loop system are assured. Simulations and
experiments are carried out to validate the effectiveness and applicability of
the proposed approach.Comment: arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:1611.07112,
arXiv:1611.0711
Learning Image-Conditioned Dynamics Models for Control of Under-actuated Legged Millirobots
Millirobots are a promising robotic platform for many applications due to
their small size and low manufacturing costs. Legged millirobots, in
particular, can provide increased mobility in complex environments and improved
scaling of obstacles. However, controlling these small, highly dynamic, and
underactuated legged systems is difficult. Hand-engineered controllers can
sometimes control these legged millirobots, but they have difficulties with
dynamic maneuvers and complex terrains. We present an approach for controlling
a real-world legged millirobot that is based on learned neural network models.
Using less than 17 minutes of data, our method can learn a predictive model of
the robot's dynamics that can enable effective gaits to be synthesized on the
fly for following user-specified waypoints on a given terrain. Furthermore, by
leveraging expressive, high-capacity neural network models, our approach allows
for these predictions to be directly conditioned on camera images, endowing the
robot with the ability to predict how different terrains might affect its
dynamics. This enables sample-efficient and effective learning for locomotion
of a dynamic legged millirobot on various terrains, including gravel, turf,
carpet, and styrofoam. Experiment videos can be found at
https://sites.google.com/view/imageconddy
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