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Design of an adaptive neural predictive nonlinear controller for nonholonomic mobile robot system based on posture identifier in the presence of disturbance
This paper proposes an adaptive neural predictive nonlinear controller to guide a nonholonomic wheeled mobile robot during continuous and non-continuous gradients trajectory tracking. The structure of the controller consists of two models that describe the kinematics and dynamics of the mobile robot system and a feedforward neural controller. The models are modified Elman neural network and feedforward multi-layer perceptron respectively. The modified Elman neural network model is trained off-line and on-line stages to guarantee the outputs of the model accurately represent the actual outputs of the mobile robot system. The trained neural model acts as the position and orientation identifier. The feedforward neural controller is trained off-line and adaptive weights are adapted on-line to find the reference torques, which controls the steady-state outputs of the mobile robot system. The feedback neural controller is based on the posture neural identifier and quadratic performance index optimization algorithm to find the optimal torque action in the transient state for N-step-ahead prediction. General back propagation algorithm is used to learn the feedforward neural controller and the posture neural identifier. Simulation results show the effectiveness of the proposed adaptive neural predictive control algorithm; this is demonstrated by the minimised tracking error and the smoothness of the torque control signal obtained with bounded external disturbances
Evolving connection weights between sensors and actuators in robots
International Symposium on Industrial Electronics. Guimaraes, 7-11 July 1997.In this paper, an evolution strategy (ES) is introduced, to learn reactive behaviour in autonomous robots. An ES is used to learn high-performance reactive behaviour for navigation and collisions avoidance. The learned behaviour is able to solve the problem in a dynamic environment; so, the learning process has proven the ability to obtain generalised behaviours. The robot starts without information about the right associations between sensors and actuators, and, from this situation, the robot is able to learn, through experience, to reach the highest adaptability grade to the sensors information. No subjective information about âhow to accomplish the taskâ is included in the fitness function. A mini-robot Khepera has been used to test the learned behaviour
Neural networks robot controller trained with evolution strategies
Congress on Evolutionary Computation. Washington, DC, 6-9 July 1999.Neural networks (NN) can be used as controllers in autonomous robots. The specific features of the navigation problem in robotics make generation of good training sets for the NN difficult. An evolution strategy (ES) is introduced to learn the weights of the NN instead of the learning method of the network. The ES is used to learn high performance reactive behavior for navigation and collision avoidance. No subjective information about âhow to accomplish the taskâ has been included in the fitness function. The learned behaviors are able to solve the problem in different environments; therefore, the learning process has the proven ability to obtain a specialized behavior. All the behaviors obtained have been tested in a set of environments and the capability of generalization is shown for each learned behavior. A simulator based on the mini-robot, Khepera, has been used to learn each behavior
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