5,306 research outputs found
Interoperability in a Heterogeneous Team of Search and Rescue Robots
Search and rescue missions are complex operations. A disaster scenario is generally unstructured, time‐varying and unpredictable. This poses several challenges for the successful deployment of unmanned technology. The variety of operational scenarios and tasks lead to the need for multiple robots of different types, domains and sizes. A priori planning of the optimal set of assets to be deployed and the definition of their mission objectives are generally not feasible as information only becomes available during mission. The ICARUS project responds to this challenge by developing a heterogeneous team composed by different and complementary robots, dynamically cooperating as an interoperable team. This chapter describes our approach to multi‐robot interoperability, understood as the ability of multiple robots to operate together, in synergy, enabling multiple teams to share data, intelligence and resources, which is the ultimate objective of ICARUS project. It also includes the analysis of the relevant standardization initiatives in multi‐robot multi‐domain systems, our implementation of an interoperability framework and several examples of multi‐robot cooperation of the ICARUS robots in realistic search and rescue missions
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
Learning for Multi-robot Cooperation in Partially Observable Stochastic Environments with Macro-actions
This paper presents a data-driven approach for multi-robot coordination in
partially-observable domains based on Decentralized Partially Observable Markov
Decision Processes (Dec-POMDPs) and macro-actions (MAs). Dec-POMDPs provide a
general framework for cooperative sequential decision making under uncertainty
and MAs allow temporally extended and asynchronous action execution. To date,
most methods assume the underlying Dec-POMDP model is known a priori or a full
simulator is available during planning time. Previous methods which aim to
address these issues suffer from local optimality and sensitivity to initial
conditions. Additionally, few hardware demonstrations involving a large team of
heterogeneous robots and with long planning horizons exist. This work addresses
these gaps by proposing an iterative sampling based Expectation-Maximization
algorithm (iSEM) to learn polices using only trajectory data containing
observations, MAs, and rewards. Our experiments show the algorithm is able to
achieve better solution quality than the state-of-the-art learning-based
methods. We implement two variants of multi-robot Search and Rescue (SAR)
domains (with and without obstacles) on hardware to demonstrate the learned
policies can effectively control a team of distributed robots to cooperate in a
partially observable stochastic environment.Comment: Accepted to the 2017 IEEE/RSJ International Conference on Intelligent
Robots and Systems (IROS 2017
A robot swarm assisting a human fire-fighter
Emergencies in industrial warehouses are a major concern for fire-fighters. The large dimensions, together with the development of dense smoke that drastically reduces visibility, represent major challenges. The GUARDIANS robot swarm is designed to assist fire-fighters in searching a large warehouse. In this paper we discuss the technology developed for a swarm of robots assisting fire-fighters. We explain the swarming algorithms that provide the functionality by which the robots react to and follow humans while no communication is required. Next we discuss the wireless communication system, which is a so-called mobile ad-hoc network. The communication network provides also the means to locate the robots and humans. Thus, the robot swarm is able to provide guidance information to the humans. Together with the fire-fighters we explored how the robot swarm should feed information back to the human fire-fighter. We have designed and experimented with interfaces for presenting swarm-based information to human beings
- …