207 research outputs found

    Cooperative localization for mobile agents: a recursive decentralized algorithm based on Kalman filter decoupling

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    We consider cooperative localization technique for mobile agents with communication and computation capabilities. We start by provide and overview of different decentralization strategies in the literature, with special focus on how these algorithms maintain an account of intrinsic correlations between state estimate of team members. Then, we present a novel decentralized cooperative localization algorithm that is a decentralized implementation of a centralized Extended Kalman Filter for cooperative localization. In this algorithm, instead of propagating cross-covariance terms, each agent propagates new intermediate local variables that can be used in an update stage to create the required propagated cross-covariance terms. Whenever there is a relative measurement in the network, the algorithm declares the agent making this measurement as the interim master. By acquiring information from the interim landmark, the agent the relative measurement is taken from, the interim master can calculate and broadcast a set of intermediate variables which each robot can then use to update its estimates to match that of a centralized Extended Kalman Filter for cooperative localization. Once an update is done, no further communication is needed until the next relative measurement

    A robust extended H-infinity filtering approach to multi-robot cooperative localization in dynamic indoor environments

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    Multi-robot cooperative localization serves as an essential task for a team of mobile robots to work within an unknown environment. Based on the real-time laser scanning data interaction, a robust approach is proposed to obtain optimal multi-robot relative observations using the Metric-based Iterative Closest Point (MbICP) algorithm, which makes it possible to utilize the surrounding environment information directly instead of placing a localization-mark on the robots. To meet the demand of dealing with the inherent non-linearities existing in the multi-robot kinematic models and the relative observations, a robust extended Hāˆž filtering (REHF) approach is developed for the multi-robot cooperative localization system, which could handle non-Gaussian process and measurement noises with respect to robot navigation in unknown dynamic scenes. Compared with the conventional multi-robot localization system using extended Kalman filtering (EKF) approach, the proposed filtering algorithm is capable of providing superior performance in a dynamic indoor environment with outlier disturbances. Both numerical experiments and experiments conducted for the Pioneer3-DX robots show that the proposed localization scheme is effective in improving both the accuracy and reliability of the performance within a complex environment.This work was supported inpart by the National Natural Science Foundation of China under grants 61075094, 61035005 and 61134009

    Distributed control and navigation system for quadrotor UAVs in GPS-denied environments

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    The problem of developing distributed control and navigation system for quadrotor UAVs operating in GPS-denied environments is addressed in the paper. Cooperative navigation, marker detection and mapping task solved by a team of multiple unmanned aerial vehicles is chosen as demo example. Developed intelligent control system complies with on 4D\RCS reference model and its implementation is based on ROS framework. Custom implementation of EKF-based map building algorithm is used to solve marker detection and map building task.Comment: Camera-ready as submitted (and accepted) to the 7th IEEE International Conference Intelligent Systems IS'2014, September 24-26, 2014, Warsaw, Polan

    Experimental Testbed for Large Multirobot Teams

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    Experimental validation is particularly important in multirobot systems research. The differences between models and real-world conditions that may not be apparent in single robot experiments are amplified because of the large number of robots, interactions between robots, and the effects of asynchronous and distributed control, sensing, and actuation. Over the last two years, we have developed an experimental testbed to support research in multirobot systems with the goal of making it easy for users to model, design, benchmark, and validate algorithms. In this article, we describe our approach to the design of a large-scale multirobot system for the experimental verification and validation of a variety of distributed robotic applications in an indoor environment

    Cooperative Localization under Limited Connectivity

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    We report two decentralized multi-agent cooperative localization algorithms in which, to reduce the communication cost, inter-agent state estimate correlations are not maintained but accounted for implicitly. In our first algorithm, to guarantee filter consistency, we account for unknown inter-agent correlations via an upper bound on the joint covariance matrix of the agents. In the second method, we use an optimization framework to estimate the unknown inter-agent cross-covariance matrix. In our algorithms, each agent localizes itself in a global coordinate frame using a local filter driven by local dead reckoning and occasional absolute measurement updates, and opportunistically corrects its pose estimate whenever it can obtain relative measurements with respect to other mobile agents. To process any relative measurement, only the agent taken the measurement and the agent the measurement is taken from need to communicate with each other. Consequently, our algorithms are decentralized algorithms that do not impose restrictive network-wide connectivity condition. Moreover, we make no assumptions about the type of agents or relative measurements. We demonstrate our algorithms in simulation and a robotic~experiment.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figure

    Cooperative Control for Target Tracking with Onboard Sensing

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    Abstract We consider the cooperative control of a team of robots to estimate the position of a moving target using onboard sensing. In particular, we do not as-sume that the robot positions are known, but estimate their positions using relative onboard sensing. Our probabilistic localization and control method takes into ac-count the motion and sensing capabilities of the individual robots to minimize the expected future uncertainty of the target position. It reasons about multiple possi-ble sensing topologies and incorporates an efficient topology switching technique to generate locally optimal controls in polynomial time complexity. Simulations show the performance of our approach and prove its flexibility to find suitable sensing topologies depending on the limited sensing capabilities of the robots and the movements of the target. Furthermore, we demonstrate the applicability of our method in various experiments with single and multiple quadrotor robots tracking a ground vehicle in an indoor environment

    A Framework and Architecture for Multi-Robot Coordination

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    In this paper, we present a framework and the software architecture for the deployment of multiple autonomous robots in an unstructured and unknown environment with applications ranging from scouting and reconnaissance, to search and rescue and manipulation tasks. Our software framework provides the methodology and the tools that enable robots to exhibit deliberative and reactive behaviors in autonomous operation, to be reprogrammed by a human operator at run-time, and to learn and adapt to unstructured, dynamic environments and new tasks, while providing performance guarantees. We demonstrate the algorithms and software on an experimental testbed that involves a team of car-like robots using a single omnidirectional camera as a sensor without explicit use of odometry
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