67 research outputs found

    Asymptotically Optimal Sampling-Based Motion Planning Methods

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    Motion planning is a fundamental problem in autonomous robotics that requires finding a path to a specified goal that avoids obstacles and takes into account a robot's limitations and constraints. It is often desirable for this path to also optimize a cost function, such as path length. Formal path-quality guarantees for continuously valued search spaces are an active area of research interest. Recent results have proven that some sampling-based planning methods probabilistically converge toward the optimal solution as computational effort approaches infinity. This survey summarizes the assumptions behind these popular asymptotically optimal techniques and provides an introduction to the significant ongoing research on this topic.Comment: Posted with permission from the Annual Review of Control, Robotics, and Autonomous Systems, Volume 4. Copyright 2021 by Annual Reviews, https://www.annualreviews.org/. 25 pages. 2 figure

    Search-based Test Generation for Automated Driving Systems: From Perception to Control Logic

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    abstract: Automated driving systems are in an intensive research and development stage, and the companies developing these systems are targeting to deploy them on public roads in a very near future. Guaranteeing safe operation of these systems is crucial as they are planned to carry passengers and share the road with other vehicles and pedestrians. Yet, there is no agreed-upon approach on how and in what detail those systems should be tested. Different organizations have different testing approaches, and one common approach is to combine simulation-based testing with real-world driving. One of the expectations from fully-automated vehicles is never to cause an accident. However, an automated vehicle may not be able to avoid all collisions, e.g., the collisions caused by other road occupants. Hence, it is important for the system designers to understand the boundary case scenarios where an autonomous vehicle can no longer avoid a collision. Besides safety, there are other expectations from automated vehicles such as comfortable driving and minimal fuel consumption. All safety and functional expectations from an automated driving system should be captured with a set of system requirements. It is challenging to create requirements that are unambiguous and usable for the design, testing, and evaluation of automated driving systems. Another challenge is to define useful metrics for assessing the testing quality because in general, it is impossible to test every possible scenario. The goal of this dissertation is to formalize the theory for testing automated vehicles. Various methods for automatic test generation for automated-driving systems in simulation environments are presented and compared. The contributions presented in this dissertation include (i) new metrics that can be used to discover the boundary cases between safe and unsafe driving conditions, (ii) a new approach that combines combinatorial testing and optimization-guided test generation methods, (iii) approaches that utilize global optimization methods and random exploration to generate critical vehicle and pedestrian trajectories for testing purposes, (iv) a publicly-available simulation-based automated vehicle testing framework that enables application of the existing testing approaches in the literature, including the new approaches presented in this dissertation.Dissertation/ThesisDoctoral Dissertation Computer Engineering 201

    Research on a semiautonomous mobile robot for loosely structured environments focused on transporting mail trolleys

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    In this thesis is presented a novel approach to model, control, and planning the motion of a nonholonomic wheeled mobile robot that applies stable pushes and pulls to a nonholonomic cart (York mail trolley) in a loosely structured environment. The method is based on grasping and ungrasping the nonholonomic cart, as a result, the robot changes its kinematics properties. In consequence, two robot configurations are produced by the task of grasping and ungrasping the load, they are: the single-robot configuration and the robot-trolley configuration. Furthermore, in order to comply with the general planar motion law of rigid bodies and the kinematic constraints imposed by the robot wheels for each configuration, the robot has been provided with two motorized steerable wheels in order to have a flexible platform able to adapt to these restrictions. [Continues.

    Advanced Applications of Rapid Prototyping Technology in Modern Engineering

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    Rapid prototyping (RP) technology has been widely known and appreciated due to its flexible and customized manufacturing capabilities. The widely studied RP techniques include stereolithography apparatus (SLA), selective laser sintering (SLS), three-dimensional printing (3DP), fused deposition modeling (FDM), 3D plotting, solid ground curing (SGC), multiphase jet solidification (MJS), laminated object manufacturing (LOM). Different techniques are associated with different materials and/or processing principles and thus are devoted to specific applications. RP technology has no longer been only for prototype building rather has been extended for real industrial manufacturing solutions. Today, the RP technology has contributed to almost all engineering areas that include mechanical, materials, industrial, aerospace, electrical and most recently biomedical engineering. This book aims to present the advanced development of RP technologies in various engineering areas as the solutions to the real world engineering problems

    Resilience for satisfaction of temporal logic specifications by dynamical systems

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    The increased adoption and deployment of cyber-physical systems in critical infrastructure in recent years have led to challenging questions about safety and reliability. These systems usually operate in uncertain environments and are required to satisfy a broad spectrum of specifications. Thus, automated tools are necessary to alleviate the need for manual design and proof of their correct behaviors. This thesis studies mathematical and computational frameworks to design correct and optimal control strategies for discrete-time and continuous-time systems with temporal and spatial specifications. Signal Temporal Logic (STL) is employed as a rich and expressive language to impose temporal constraints and deadlines on system performance. The first part of the thesis introduces a novel quantitative semantics for STL that improves the evaluation of temporal logic specifications. Furthermore, an extension of STL, called Weighted Signal Temporal Logic (wSTL), is defined in order to formalize satisfaction priorities of multiple specifications and time preferences in a high-level specification. Learning-based frameworks are proposed to infer quantitative semantics, and satisfaction priorities and preferences from data. The second part develops optimization frameworks to determine control strategies enforcing the satisfaction of wSTL specifications by different classes of systems. Mixed-integer programming and gradient-based optimization techniques are studied to solve the control synthesis problem. Further evaluation and optimization algorithms are presented based on Control Barrier Functions to guarantee continuous-time satisfaction of safety-critical specifications in a system. The third part of this thesis focuses on utilizing STL to express spatio-temporal specifications that are widely used in networks of locally interacting dynamical systems. Machine learning techniques are used to derive spatio-temporal quantitative semantics, which is employed in automated frameworks for evaluation and synthesis of complex spatial and temporal properties. Case studies illustrating the synthesis of spatio-temporal patterns in biological cell networks are presented
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