5,371 research outputs found
A mosaic of eyes
Autonomous navigation is a traditional research topic in intelligent robotics and vehicles, which requires a robot to perceive its environment through onboard sensors such as cameras or laser scanners, to enable it to drive to its goal. Most research to date has focused on the development of a large and smart brain to gain autonomous capability for robots. There are three fundamental questions to be answered by an autonomous mobile robot: 1) Where am I going? 2) Where am I? and 3) How do I get there? To answer these basic questions, a robot requires a massive spatial memory and considerable computational resources to accomplish perception, localization, path planning, and control. It is not yet possible to deliver the centralized intelligence required for our real-life applications, such as autonomous ground vehicles and wheelchairs in care centers. In fact, most autonomous robots try to mimic how humans navigate, interpreting images taken by cameras and then taking decisions accordingly. They may encounter the following difficulties
Physics-based Motion Planning with Temporal Logic Specifications
One of the main foci of robotics is nowadays centered in providing a great
degree of autonomy to robots. A fundamental step in this direction is to give
them the ability to plan in discrete and continuous spaces to find the required
motions to complete a complex task. In this line, some recent approaches
describe tasks with Linear Temporal Logic (LTL) and reason on discrete actions
to guide sampling-based motion planning, with the aim of finding
dynamically-feasible motions that satisfy the temporal-logic task
specifications. The present paper proposes an LTL planning approach enhanced
with the use of ontologies to describe and reason about the task, on the one
hand, and that includes physics-based motion planning to allow the purposeful
manipulation of objects, on the other hand. The proposal has been implemented
and is illustrated with didactic examples with a mobile robot in simple
scenarios where some of the goals are occupied with objects that must be
removed in order to fulfill the task.Comment: The 20th World Congress of the International Federation of Automatic
Control, 9-14 July 201
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