259 research outputs found
Severity-sensitive norm-governed multi-agent planning
This research was funded by Selex ES. The software developed during this research, including the norm analysis and planning algorithms, the simulator and harbour protection scenario used during evaluation is freely available from doi:10.5258/SOTON/D0139Peer reviewedPublisher PD
Agent-Driven Representations, Algorithms, and Metrics for Automated Organizational Design.
As cooperative multiagent systems (MASs) increase in interconnectivity, complexity, size, and longevity, coordinating the agents' reasoning and behaviors becomes increasingly difficult. One approach to address these issues is to use insights from human organizations to design structures within which the agents can more efficiently reason and interact. Generally speaking, an organization influences each agent such that, by following its respective influences, an agent can make globally-useful local decisions without having to explicitly reason about the complete joint coordination problem. For example, an organizational influence might constrain and/or inform which actions an agent performs. If these influences are well-constructed to be cohesive and correlated across the agents, then each agent is influenced into reasoning about and performing only the actions that are appropriate for its (organizationally-designated) portion of the joint coordination problem.
In this dissertation, I develop an agent-driven approach to organizations, wherein the foundation for representing and reasoning about an organization stems from the needs of the agents in the MAS. I create an organizational specification language to express the possible ways in which an organization could influence the agents' decision making processes, and leverage details from those decision processes to establish quantitative, principled metrics for organizational performance based on the expected impact that an organization will have on the agents' reasoning and behaviors.
Building upon my agent-driven organizational representations, I identify a strategy for automating the organizational design process~(ODP), wherein my ODP computes a quantitative description of organizational patterns and then searches through those possible patterns to identify an (approximately) optimal set of organizational influences for the MAS. Evaluating my ODP reveals that it can create organizations that both influence the MAS into effective patterns of joint policies and also streamline the agents' decision making in a coordinate manner. Finally, I use my agent-driven approach to identify characteristics of effective abstractions over organizational influences and a heuristic strategy for converging on a good abstraction.PhDComputer Science and EngineeringUniversity of Michigan, Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studieshttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/113616/1/jsleight_1.pd
Self-organization and autonomy in computational networks: agents-based contractual workflow paradigm
We describe an agents-based contractual workflow paradigm for Self-organization and autonomy in computational networks. The agent-based paradigm can be interpreted as the outcome arising out of deterministic, nondeterministic or stochastic interaction among a set of agents that includes the environment. These interactions are like chemical reactions and result in self-organization. Since the reaction rules are inherently parallel, any number of actions can be performed cooperatively or competitively among the subsets of elements, so that the agents carry out the required actions. Also we describe the application of this paradigm in finding short duration paths, chemical- patent mining, and in cloud computing services
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Multilayered skill learning and movement coordination for autonomous robotic agents
With advances in technology expanding the capabilities of robots, while at the same time making robots cheaper to manufacture, robots are rapidly becoming more prevalent in both industrial and domestic settings. An increase in the number of robots, and the likely subsequent decrease in the ratio of people currently trained to directly control the robots, engenders a need for robots to be able to act autonomously. Larger numbers of robots present together provide new challenges and opportunities for developing complex autonomous robot behaviors capable of multirobot collaboration and coordination.
The focus of this thesis is twofold. The first part explores applying machine learning techniques to teach simulated humanoid robots skills such as how to move or walk and manipulate objects in their environment. Learning is performed using reinforcement learning policy search methods, and layered learning methodologies are employed during the learning process in which multiple lower level skills are incrementally learned and combined with each other to develop richer higher level skills. By incrementally learning skills in layers such that new skills are learned in the presence of previously learned skills, as opposed to individually in isolation, we ensure that the learned skills will work well together and can be combined to perform complex behaviors (e.g. playing soccer). The second part of the thesis centers on developing algorithms to coordinate the movement and efforts of multiple robots working together to quickly complete tasks. These algorithms prioritize minimizing the makespan, or time for all robots to complete a task, while also attempting to avoid interference and collisions among the robots. An underlying objective of this research is to develop techniques and methodologies that allow autonomous robots to robustly interact with their environment (through skill learning) and with each other (through movement coordination) in order to perform tasks and accomplish goals asked of them.
The work in this thesis is implemented and evaluated in the RoboCup 3D simulation soccer domain, and has been a key component of the UT Austin Villa team winning the RoboCup 3D simulation league world championship six out of the past seven years.Computer Science
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Coordination for Scalable Multiple Robot Planning Under Temporal Uncertainty
This dissertation incorporates coalition formation and probabilistic planning towards a domain-independent automated planning solution scalable to multiple heterogeneous robots in complex domains. The first research direction investigates the effectiveness of Task Fusion and introduces heuristics that improve task allocation and result in better quality plans, while requiring lower computational cost than the baseline approaches. The heuristics incorporate relaxed plans to estimate coupling and determine which tasks to fuse. As a result, larger temporal continuous planning problems involving multiple robots can be solved. The second research direction introduces new coordination methods to merge plans and resolve conflicts while extending the framework to domains with stochastic action duration. Merging distributedly generated plans becomes computationally costly when task plans are tightly coupled, and conflicts arise due to dependencies between plan actions. Existing methods either scale poorly as the number of agents and tasks increases, or do not minimize makespan, the overall time necessary to execute all tasks. A new family of plan coordination and conflict resolution algorithms is introduced to merge independently generated plans, minimize the resulting makespan, and scale to a large number of tasks and agents in complex problems. A thorough algorithmic analysis and empirical evaluation demonstrates how the new conflict identification and resolution models can impact the resulting plan quality and computational cost across three heterogeneous multiagent domains and outperform the baseline algorithms
Planning Algorithms for Multi-Robot Active Perception
A fundamental task of robotic systems is to use on-board sensors and perception algorithms to understand high-level semantic properties of an environment. These semantic properties may include a map of the environment, the presence of objects, or the parameters of a dynamic field. Observations are highly viewpoint dependent and, thus, the performance of perception algorithms can be improved by planning the motion of the robots to obtain high-value observations. This motivates the problem of active perception, where the goal is to plan the motion of robots to improve perception performance. This fundamental problem is central to many robotics applications, including environmental monitoring, planetary exploration, and precision agriculture. The core contribution of this thesis is a suite of planning algorithms for multi-robot active perception. These algorithms are designed to improve system-level performance on many fronts: online and anytime planning, addressing uncertainty, optimising over a long time horizon, decentralised coordination, robustness to unreliable communication, predicting plans of other agents, and exploiting characteristics of perception models. We first propose the decentralised Monte Carlo tree search algorithm as a generally-applicable, decentralised algorithm for multi-robot planning. We then present a self-organising map algorithm designed to find paths that maximally observe points of interest. Finally, we consider the problem of mission monitoring, where a team of robots monitor the progress of a robotic mission. A spatiotemporal optimal stopping algorithm is proposed and a generalisation for decentralised monitoring. Experimental results are presented for a range of scenarios, such as marine operations and object recognition. Our analytical and empirical results demonstrate theoretically-interesting and practically-relevant properties that support the use of the approaches in practice
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