6,180 research outputs found
MOMA: Visual Mobile Marker Odometry
In this paper, we present a cooperative odometry scheme based on the
detection of mobile markers in line with the idea of cooperative positioning
for multiple robots [1]. To this end, we introduce a simple optimization scheme
that realizes visual mobile marker odometry via accurate fixed marker-based
camera positioning and analyse the characteristics of errors inherent to the
method compared to classical fixed marker-based navigation and visual odometry.
In addition, we provide a specific UAV-UGV configuration that allows for
continuous movements of the UAV without doing stops and a minimal
caterpillar-like configuration that works with one UGV alone. Finally, we
present a real-world implementation and evaluation for the proposed UAV-UGV
configuration
Aerial-Ground collaborative sensing: Third-Person view for teleoperation
Rapid deployment and operation are key requirements in time critical
application, such as Search and Rescue (SaR). Efficiently teleoperated ground
robots can support first-responders in such situations. However, first-person
view teleoperation is sub-optimal in difficult terrains, while a third-person
perspective can drastically increase teleoperation performance. Here, we
propose a Micro Aerial Vehicle (MAV)-based system that can autonomously provide
third-person perspective to ground robots. While our approach is based on local
visual servoing, it further leverages the global localization of several ground
robots to seamlessly transfer between these ground robots in GPS-denied
environments. Therewith one MAV can support multiple ground robots on a demand
basis. Furthermore, our system enables different visual detection regimes, and
enhanced operability, and return-home functionality. We evaluate our system in
real-world SaR scenarios.Comment: Accepted for publication in 2018 IEEE International Symposium on
Safety, Security and Rescue Robotics (SSRR
Robotic Wireless Sensor Networks
In this chapter, we present a literature survey of an emerging, cutting-edge,
and multi-disciplinary field of research at the intersection of Robotics and
Wireless Sensor Networks (WSN) which we refer to as Robotic Wireless Sensor
Networks (RWSN). We define a RWSN as an autonomous networked multi-robot system
that aims to achieve certain sensing goals while meeting and maintaining
certain communication performance requirements, through cooperative control,
learning and adaptation. While both of the component areas, i.e., Robotics and
WSN, are very well-known and well-explored, there exist a whole set of new
opportunities and research directions at the intersection of these two fields
which are relatively or even completely unexplored. One such example would be
the use of a set of robotic routers to set up a temporary communication path
between a sender and a receiver that uses the controlled mobility to the
advantage of packet routing. We find that there exist only a limited number of
articles to be directly categorized as RWSN related works whereas there exist a
range of articles in the robotics and the WSN literature that are also relevant
to this new field of research. To connect the dots, we first identify the core
problems and research trends related to RWSN such as connectivity,
localization, routing, and robust flow of information. Next, we classify the
existing research on RWSN as well as the relevant state-of-the-arts from
robotics and WSN community according to the problems and trends identified in
the first step. Lastly, we analyze what is missing in the existing literature,
and identify topics that require more research attention in the future
Computational intelligence approaches to robotics, automation, and control [Volume guest editors]
No abstract available
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
Past, Present, and Future of Simultaneous Localization And Mapping: Towards the Robust-Perception Age
Simultaneous Localization and Mapping (SLAM)consists in the concurrent
construction of a model of the environment (the map), and the estimation of the
state of the robot moving within it. The SLAM community has made astonishing
progress over the last 30 years, enabling large-scale real-world applications,
and witnessing a steady transition of this technology to industry. We survey
the current state of SLAM. We start by presenting what is now the de-facto
standard formulation for SLAM. We then review related work, covering a broad
set of topics including robustness and scalability in long-term mapping, metric
and semantic representations for mapping, theoretical performance guarantees,
active SLAM and exploration, and other new frontiers. This paper simultaneously
serves as a position paper and tutorial to those who are users of SLAM. By
looking at the published research with a critical eye, we delineate open
challenges and new research issues, that still deserve careful scientific
investigation. The paper also contains the authors' take on two questions that
often animate discussions during robotics conferences: Do robots need SLAM? and
Is SLAM solved
Towards Optimally Decentralized Multi-Robot Collision Avoidance via Deep Reinforcement Learning
Developing a safe and efficient collision avoidance policy for multiple
robots is challenging in the decentralized scenarios where each robot generate
its paths without observing other robots' states and intents. While other
distributed multi-robot collision avoidance systems exist, they often require
extracting agent-level features to plan a local collision-free action, which
can be computationally prohibitive and not robust. More importantly, in
practice the performance of these methods are much lower than their centralized
counterparts.
We present a decentralized sensor-level collision avoidance policy for
multi-robot systems, which directly maps raw sensor measurements to an agent's
steering commands in terms of movement velocity. As a first step toward
reducing the performance gap between decentralized and centralized methods, we
present a multi-scenario multi-stage training framework to find an optimal
policy which is trained over a large number of robots on rich, complex
environments simultaneously using a policy gradient based reinforcement
learning algorithm. We validate the learned sensor-level collision avoidance
policy in a variety of simulated scenarios with thorough performance
evaluations and show that the final learned policy is able to find time
efficient, collision-free paths for a large-scale robot system. We also
demonstrate that the learned policy can be well generalized to new scenarios
that do not appear in the entire training period, including navigating a
heterogeneous group of robots and a large-scale scenario with 100 robots.
Videos are available at https://sites.google.com/view/drlmac
- …