29,536 research outputs found
Batch Informed Trees (BIT*): Informed Asymptotically Optimal Anytime Search
Path planning in robotics often requires finding high-quality solutions to
continuously valued and/or high-dimensional problems. These problems are
challenging and most planning algorithms instead solve simplified
approximations. Popular approximations include graphs and random samples, as
respectively used by informed graph-based searches and anytime sampling-based
planners. Informed graph-based searches, such as A*, traditionally use
heuristics to search a priori graphs in order of potential solution quality.
This makes their search efficient but leaves their performance dependent on the
chosen approximation. If its resolution is too low then they may not find a
(suitable) solution but if it is too high then they may take a prohibitively
long time to do so. Anytime sampling-based planners, such as RRT*,
traditionally use random sampling to approximate the problem domain
incrementally. This allows them to increase resolution until a suitable
solution is found but makes their search dependent on the order of
approximation. Arbitrary sequences of random samples approximate the problem
domain in every direction simultaneously and but may be prohibitively
inefficient at containing a solution. This paper unifies and extends these two
approaches to develop Batch Informed Trees (BIT*), an informed, anytime
sampling-based planner. BIT* solves continuous path planning problems
efficiently by using sampling and heuristics to alternately approximate and
search the problem domain. Its search is ordered by potential solution quality,
as in A*, and its approximation improves indefinitely with additional
computational time, as in RRT*. It is shown analytically to be almost-surely
asymptotically optimal and experimentally to outperform existing sampling-based
planners, especially on high-dimensional planning problems.Comment: International Journal of Robotics Research (IJRR). 32 Pages. 16
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Batch Informed Trees (BIT*): Sampling-based Optimal Planning via the Heuristically Guided Search of Implicit Random Geometric Graphs
In this paper, we present Batch Informed Trees (BIT*), a planning algorithm
based on unifying graph- and sampling-based planning techniques. By recognizing
that a set of samples describes an implicit random geometric graph (RGG), we
are able to combine the efficient ordered nature of graph-based techniques,
such as A*, with the anytime scalability of sampling-based algorithms, such as
Rapidly-exploring Random Trees (RRT).
BIT* uses a heuristic to efficiently search a series of increasingly dense
implicit RGGs while reusing previous information. It can be viewed as an
extension of incremental graph-search techniques, such as Lifelong Planning A*
(LPA*), to continuous problem domains as well as a generalization of existing
sampling-based optimal planners. It is shown that it is probabilistically
complete and asymptotically optimal.
We demonstrate the utility of BIT* on simulated random worlds in
and and manipulation problems on CMU's HERB, a
14-DOF two-armed robot. On these problems, BIT* finds better solutions faster
than RRT, RRT*, Informed RRT*, and Fast Marching Trees (FMT*) with faster
anytime convergence towards the optimum, especially in high dimensions.Comment: 8 Pages. 6 Figures. Video available at
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TQIoCC48gp
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