216 research outputs found

    Evolutionary robotics and neuroscience

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    Bio-Inspired Robotics

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    Modern robotic technologies have enabled robots to operate in a variety of unstructured and dynamically-changing environments, in addition to traditional structured environments. Robots have, thus, become an important element in our everyday lives. One key approach to develop such intelligent and autonomous robots is to draw inspiration from biological systems. Biological structure, mechanisms, and underlying principles have the potential to provide new ideas to support the improvement of conventional robotic designs and control. Such biological principles usually originate from animal or even plant models, for robots, which can sense, think, walk, swim, crawl, jump or even fly. Thus, it is believed that these bio-inspired methods are becoming increasingly important in the face of complex applications. Bio-inspired robotics is leading to the study of innovative structures and computing with sensory–motor coordination and learning to achieve intelligence, flexibility, stability, and adaptation for emergent robotic applications, such as manipulation, learning, and control. This Special Issue invites original papers of innovative ideas and concepts, new discoveries and improvements, and novel applications and business models relevant to the selected topics of ``Bio-Inspired Robotics''. Bio-Inspired Robotics is a broad topic and an ongoing expanding field. This Special Issue collates 30 papers that address some of the important challenges and opportunities in this broad and expanding field

    Energy Based Control System Designs for Underactuated Robot Fish Propulsion

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    In nature through millions of years of evolution fish and cetaceans have developed fast efficient and highly manoeuvrable methods of marine propulsion. A recent explosion in demand for sub sea robotics, for conducting tasks such as sub sea exploration and survey has left developers desiring to capture some of the novel mechanisms evolved by fish and cetaceans to increase the efficiency of speed and manoeuvrability of sub sea robots. Research has revealed that interactions with vortices and other unsteady fluid effects play a significant role in the efficiency of fish and cetaceans. However attempts to duplicate this with robotic fish have been limited by the difficulty of predicting or sensing such uncertain fluid effects. This study aims to develop a gait generation method for a robotic fish with a degree of passivity which could allow the body to dynamically interact with and potentially synchronise with vortices within the flow without the need to actually sense them. In this study this is achieved through the development of a novel energy based gait generation tactic, where the gait of the robotic fish is determined through regulation of the state energy rather than absolute state position. Rather than treating fluid interactions as undesirable disturbances and `fighting' them to maintain a rigid geometric defined gait, energy based control allows the disturbances to the system generated by vortices in the surrounding flow to contribute to the energy of the system and hence the dynamic motion. Three different energy controllers are presented within this thesis, a deadbeat energy controller equivalent to an analytically optimised model predictive controller, a HH_\infty disturbance rejecting controller with a novel gradient decent optimisation and finally a error feedback controller with a novel alternative error metric. The controllers were tested on a robotic fish simulation platform developed within this project. The simulation platform consisted of the solution of a series of ordinary differential equations for solid body dynamics coupled with a finite element incompressible fluid dynamic simulation of the surrounding flow. results demonstrated the effectiveness of the energy based control approach and illustrate the importance of choice of controller in performance

    In silico case studies of compliant robots: AMARSI deliverable 3.3

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    In the deliverable 3.2 we presented how the morphological computing ap- proach can significantly facilitate the control strategy in several scenarios, e.g. quadruped locomotion, bipedal locomotion and reaching. In particular, the Kitty experimental platform is an example of the use of morphological computation to allow quadruped locomotion. In this deliverable we continue with the simulation studies on the application of the different morphological computation strategies to control a robotic system

    Chaotic exploration and learning of locomotor behaviours

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    Recent developments in the embodied approach to understanding the generation of adaptive behaviour, suggests that the design of adaptive neural circuits for rhythmic motor patterns should not be done in isolation from an appreciation, and indeed exploitation, of neural-body-environment interactions. Utilising spontaneous mutual entrainment between neural systems and physical bodies provides a useful passage to the regions of phase space which are naturally structured by the neuralbody- environmental interactions. A growing body of work has provided evidence that chaotic dynamics can be useful in allowing embodied systems to spontaneously explore potentially useful motor patterns. However, up until now there has been no general integrated neural system that allows goal-directed, online, realtime exploration and capture of motor patterns without recourse to external monitoring, evaluation or training methods. For the first time, we introduce such a system in the form of a fully dynamic neural system, exploiting intrinsic chaotic dynamics, for the exploration and learning of the possible locomotion patterns of an articulated robot of an arbitrary morphology in an unknown environment. The controller is modelled as a network of neural oscillators which are coupled only through physical embodiment, and goal directed exploration of coordinated motor patterns is achieved by a chaotic search using adaptive bifurcation. The phase space of the indirectly coupled neural-body-environment system contains multiple transient or permanent self-organised dynamics each of which is a candidate for a locomotion behaviour. The adaptive bifurcation enables the system orbit to wander through various phase-coordinated states using its intrinsic chaotic dynamics as a driving force and stabilises the system on to one of the states matching the given goal criteria. In order to improve the sustainability of useful transient patterns, sensory homeostasis has been introduced which results in an increased diversity of motor outputs, thus achieving multi-scale exploration. A rhythmic pattern discovered by this process is memorised and sustained by changing the wiring between initially disconnected oscillators using an adaptive synchronisation method. The dynamical nature of the weak coupling through physical embodiment allows this adaptive weight learning to be easily integrated, thus forming a continuous exploration-learning system. Our result shows that the novel neuro-robotic system is able to create and learn a number of emergent locomotion behaviours for a wide range of body configurations and physical environment, and can re-adapt after sustaining damage. The implications and analyses of these results for investigating the generality and limitations of the proposed system are discussed

    Modeling, Control and Locomotion Planning of an Anguilliform Fish Robot

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    Ph.DDOCTOR OF PHILOSOPH
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