6,217 research outputs found
Intelligent manipulation technique for multi-branch robotic systems
New analytical development in kinematics planning is reported. The INtelligent KInematics Planner (INKIP) consists of the kinematics spline theory and the adaptive logic annealing process. Also, a novel framework of robot learning mechanism is introduced. The FUzzy LOgic Self Organized Neural Networks (FULOSONN) integrates fuzzy logic in commands, control, searching, and reasoning, the embedded expert system for nominal robotics knowledge implementation, and the self organized neural networks for the dynamic knowledge evolutionary process. Progress on the mechanical construction of SRA Advanced Robotic System (SRAARS) and the real time robot vision system is also reported. A decision was made to incorporate the Local Area Network (LAN) technology in the overall communication system
Scan matching by cross-correlation and differential evolution
Scan matching is an important task, solved in the context of many high-level problems including pose estimation, indoor localization, simultaneous localization and mapping and others. Methods that are accurate and adaptive and at the same time computationally efficient are required to enable location-based services in autonomous mobile devices. Such devices usually have a wide range of high-resolution sensors but only a limited processing power and constrained energy supply. This work introduces a novel high-level scan matching strategy that uses a combination of two advanced algorithms recently used in this field: cross-correlation and differential evolution. The cross-correlation between two laser range scans is used as an efficient measure of scan alignment and the differential evolution algorithm is used to search for the parameters of a transformation that aligns the scans. The proposed method was experimentally validated and showed good ability to match laser range scans taken shortly after each other and an excellent ability to match laser range scans taken with longer time intervals between them.Web of Science88art. no. 85
Runtime resource management for vision-based applications in mobile robots
Computer-vision (CV) applications are an important part of mobile robot automation, analyzing the perceived raw data from vision sensors and providing a rich amount of information on the surrounding environment. The design of a high-speed and energy-efficient CV application for a resource-constrained mobile robot, while maintaining a certain targeted level of accuracy in computation, is a challenging task. This is because such applications demand a lot of resources, e.g. computing capacity and battery energy, to run seamlessly in real time. Moreover, there is always a trade-off between accuracy, performance and energy consumption, as these factors dynamically affect each other at runtime. In this thesis, we investigate novel runtime resource management approaches to improve performance and energy efficiency of vision-based applications in mobile robots. Due to the dynamic correlation between different management objectives, such as energy consumption and execution time, both environmental and computational observations need to be dynamically updated, and the actuators are manipulated at runtime based on these observations. Algorithmic and computational parameters of a CV application (output accuracy and CPU voltage/frequency) are adjusted by measuring the key factors associated with the intensity of computations and strain on CPUs (environmental complexity and instantaneous power). Furthermore, we show how mechanical characteristics of the robot, i.e. the speed of movement in this thesis, can affect the computational behaviour. Based on this investigation, we add the speed of a robot, as an actuator, to our resource management algorithm besides the considered computational knobs (output accuracy and CPU voltage/frequency). To evaluate the proposed approach, we perform several experiments on an unmanned ground vehicle equipped with an embedded computer board and use RGB and event cameras as the vision sensors for CV applications. The obtained results show that the presented management strategy improves the performance and accuracy of vision-based applications while significantly reducing the energy consumption compared with the state-of-the-art solutions. Moreover, we demonstrate that considering simultaneously both computational and mechanical aspects in management of CV applications running on mobile robots significantly reduces the energy consumption compared with similar methods that consider these two aspects separately, oblivious to each other’s outcome
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