3,668 research outputs found

    Spatio-Temporal Patterns act as Computational Mechanisms governing Emergent behavior in Robotic Swarms

    Get PDF
    open access articleOur goal is to control a robotic swarm without removing its swarm-like nature. In other words, we aim to intrinsically control a robotic swarm emergent behavior. Past attempts at governing robotic swarms or their selfcoordinating emergent behavior, has proven ineffective, largely due to the swarm’s inherent randomness (making it difficult to predict) and utter simplicity (they lack a leader, any kind of centralized control, long-range communication, global knowledge, complex internal models and only operate on a couple of basic, reactive rules). The main problem is that emergent phenomena itself is not fully understood, despite being at the forefront of current research. Research into 1D and 2D Cellular Automata has uncovered a hidden computational layer which bridges the micromacro gap (i.e., how individual behaviors at the micro-level influence the global behaviors on the macro-level). We hypothesize that there also lie embedded computational mechanisms at the heart of a robotic swarm’s emergent behavior. To test this theory, we proceeded to simulate robotic swarms (represented as both particles and dynamic networks) and then designed local rules to induce various types of intelligent, emergent behaviors (as well as designing genetic algorithms to evolve robotic swarms with emergent behaviors). Finally, we analysed these robotic swarms and successfully confirmed our hypothesis; analyzing their developments and interactions over time revealed various forms of embedded spatiotemporal patterns which store, propagate and parallel process information across the swarm according to some internal, collision-based logic (solving the mystery of how simple robots are able to self-coordinate and allow global behaviors to emerge across the swarm)

    Towards adaptive multi-robot systems: self-organization and self-adaptation

    Get PDF
    Dieser Beitrag ist mit Zustimmung des Rechteinhabers aufgrund einer (DFG geförderten) Allianz- bzw. Nationallizenz frei zugänglich.This publication is with permission of the rights owner freely accessible due to an Alliance licence and a national licence (funded by the DFG, German Research Foundation) respectively.The development of complex systems ensembles that operate in uncertain environments is a major challenge. The reason for this is that system designers are not able to fully specify the system during specification and development and before it is being deployed. Natural swarm systems enjoy similar characteristics, yet, being self-adaptive and being able to self-organize, these systems show beneficial emergent behaviour. Similar concepts can be extremely helpful for artificial systems, especially when it comes to multi-robot scenarios, which require such solution in order to be applicable to highly uncertain real world application. In this article, we present a comprehensive overview over state-of-the-art solutions in emergent systems, self-organization, self-adaptation, and robotics. We discuss these approaches in the light of a framework for multi-robot systems and identify similarities, differences missing links and open gaps that have to be addressed in order to make this framework possible

    Swarm-inspired solution strategy for the search problem of unmanned aerial vehicles

    Get PDF
    Learning from the emergent behaviour of social insects, this research studies the influences of environment to collective problem-solving of insect behaviour and distributed intelligent systems. Literature research has been conducted to understand the emergent paradigms of social insects, and to investigate current research and development of distributed intelligent systems. On the basis of the literature investigation, the environment is considered to have significant impact on the effectiveness and efficiency of collective problem-solving. A framework of collective problem-solving is developed in an interdisciplinary context to describe the influences of the environment to insect behaviour and problem-solving of distributed intelligent systems. The environment roles and responsibilities are transformed into and deployed as a problem-solving mechanism for distributed intelligent systems. A swarm-inspired search strategy is proposed as a behaviour-based cooperative search solution. It is applied to the cooperative search problem of Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs) with a series of experiments implemented for evaluation. The search environment represents the specification and requirements of the search problem; defines tasks to be achieved and maintained; and it is where targets are locally observable and accessible to UAVs. Therefore, the information provided through the search environment is used to define rules of behaviour for UAVs. The initial detection of target signal refers to modified configurations of the search environment, which mediates local communications among UAVs and is used as a means of coordination. The experimental results indicate that, the swarm-inspired search strategy is a valuable alternative solution to current approaches of cooperative search problem of UAVs. In the proposed search solution, the diagonal formation of two UAVs is able to produce superior performance than the triangular formation of three UAVs for the average detection time and the number of targets located within the maximum time length

    Advances in the Hierarchical Emergent Behaviors (HEB) approach to autonomous vehicles

    Get PDF
    Widespread deployment of autonomous vehicles (AVs) presents formidable challenges in terms on handling scalability and complexity, particularly regarding vehicular reaction in the face of unforeseen corner cases. Hierarchical Emergent Behaviors (HEB) is a scalable architecture based on the concepts of emergent behaviors and hierarchical decomposition. It relies on a few simple but powerful rules to govern local vehicular interactions. Rather than requiring prescriptive programming of every possible scenario, HEB’s approach relies on global behaviors induced by the application of these local, well-understood rules. Our first two papers on HEB focused on a primal set of rules applied at the first hierarchical level. On the path to systematize a solid design methodology, this paper proposes additional rules for the second level, studies through simulations the resultant richer set of emergent behaviors, and discusses the communica-tion mechanisms between the different levels.Peer ReviewedPostprint (author's final draft

    Constructing Geometries for Group Control: Methods for Reasoning about Social Behaviors

    Get PDF
    Social behaviors in groups has been the subjects of hundreds of studies in a variety of research disciplines, including biology, physics, and robotics. In particular, flocking behaviors (commonly exhibited by birds and fish) are widely considered archetypical social behavioris and are due, in part, to the local interactions among the individuals and the environment. Despite a large number of investigations and a significant fraction of these providing algorithmic descriptions of flocking models, incompleteness and imprecision are readily identifiable in these algorithms, algorithmic input, and validation of the models. This has led to a limited understanding of the group level behaviors. Through two case-studies and a detailed meta-study of the literature, this dissertation shows that study of the individual behaviors are not adequate for understanding the behaviors displayed by the group. To highlight the limitations in only studying the individuals, this dissertation introduces a set of tools, that together, unify many of the existing microscopic approaches. A meta-study of the literature using these tools reveal that there are many small differences and ambiguities in the flocking scenarios being studied by different researchers and domains; unfortunately, these differences are of considerable significance. To address this issue, this dissertation exploits the predictable nature of the group’s behaviors in order to control the given group and thus hope to gain a fuller understanding of the collective. From the current literature, it is clear the environment is an important determinant in the resulting collective behaviors. This dissertation presents a method for reasoning about the effects the geometry of an environment has on individuals that exhibit collective behaviors in order to control them. This work formalizes the problem of controlling such groups by means of changing the environment in which the group operates and shows this problem to be PSPACE-Hard. A general methodology and basic framework is presented to address this problem. The proposed approach is general in that it is agnostic to the individual’s behaviors and geometric representations of the environment; allowing for a large variety in groups, desired behaviors, and environmental constraints to be considered. The results from both the simulations and over 80 robot trials show (1) the solution can automatically generate environments for reliably controlling various groups and (2) the solution can apply to other application domains; such as multi-agent formation planning for shepherding and piloting applications
    • …
    corecore