10,655 research outputs found
Artificial Intelligence and Systems Theory: Applied to Cooperative Robots
This paper describes an approach to the design of a population of cooperative
robots based on concepts borrowed from Systems Theory and Artificial
Intelligence. The research has been developed under the SocRob project, carried
out by the Intelligent Systems Laboratory at the Institute for Systems and
Robotics - Instituto Superior Tecnico (ISR/IST) in Lisbon. The acronym of the
project stands both for "Society of Robots" and "Soccer Robots", the case study
where we are testing our population of robots. Designing soccer robots is a
very challenging problem, where the robots must act not only to shoot a ball
towards the goal, but also to detect and avoid static (walls, stopped robots)
and dynamic (moving robots) obstacles. Furthermore, they must cooperate to
defeat an opposing team. Our past and current research in soccer robotics
includes cooperative sensor fusion for world modeling, object recognition and
tracking, robot navigation, multi-robot distributed task planning and
coordination, including cooperative reinforcement learning in cooperative and
adversarial environments, and behavior-based architectures for real time task
execution of cooperating robot teams
Pose consensus based on dual quaternion algebra with application to decentralized formation control of mobile manipulators
This paper presents a solution based on dual quaternion algebra to the
general problem of pose (i.e., position and orientation) consensus for systems
composed of multiple rigid-bodies. The dual quaternion algebra is used to model
the agents' poses and also in the distributed control laws, making the proposed
technique easily applicable to time-varying formation control of general
robotic systems. The proposed pose consensus protocol has guaranteed
convergence when the interaction among the agents is represented by directed
graphs with directed spanning trees, which is a more general result when
compared to the literature on formation control. In order to illustrate the
proposed pose consensus protocol and its extension to the problem of formation
control, we present a numerical simulation with a large number of free-flying
agents and also an application of cooperative manipulation by using real mobile
manipulators
Bounded Distributed Flocking Control of Nonholonomic Mobile Robots
There have been numerous studies on the problem of flocking control for
multiagent systems whose simplified models are presented in terms of point-mass
elements. Meanwhile, full dynamic models pose some challenging problems in
addressing the flocking control problem of mobile robots due to their
nonholonomic dynamic properties. Taking practical constraints into
consideration, we propose a novel approach to distributed flocking control of
nonholonomic mobile robots by bounded feedback. The flocking control objectives
consist of velocity consensus, collision avoidance, and cohesion maintenance
among mobile robots. A flocking control protocol which is based on the
information of neighbor mobile robots is constructed. The theoretical analysis
is conducted with the help of a Lyapunov-like function and graph theory.
Simulation results are shown to demonstrate the efficacy of the proposed
distributed flocking control scheme
Coordinated task manipulation by nonholonomic mobile robots
Coordinated task manipulation by a group of autonomous mobile robots has received signicant research effort in the last decade. Previous studies in the area revealed that one of the main problems in the area is to avoid the collisions of the robots with obstacles as well as with other members of the group. Another problem is to come up with a model for successful task manipulation. Signicant research effort has accumulated on the denition of forces to generate reference trajectories for each autonomous mobile robots engaged in coordinated behavior. If the mobile robots are nonholonomic, this approach fails to guarantee successful manipulation of the task since the so-generated reference trajectories might not satisfy the nonholonomic constraint. In this work, we introduce a novel coordinated task manipulation model inclusive of an online collision avoidance algorithm. The reference trajectory for each autonomous nonholonomic mobile robot is generated online in terms of linear and angular velocity references for the robot; hence these references automatically satisfy the nonholonomic constraint. The generated reference velocities inevitably depend on the nature of the specied coordinated task. Several coordinated task examples, on the basis of a generic task, have been presented and the proposed model is veried through simulations
Formation control of nonholonomic mobile robots using implicit polynomials and elliptic Fourier descriptors
This paper presents a novel method for the formation control of a group of nonholonomic mobile robots using implicit and parametric descriptions of the desired formation shape. The formation control strategy employs implicit polynomial (IP) representations to generate potential fields for achieving the desired formation and the elliptical Fourier descriptors (EFD) to maintain the formation once achieved. Coordination of the robots is modeled by linear springs between each robot and its two nearest neighbors. Advantages of this new method are increased flexibility in the formation shape, scalability to different swarm sizes and easy implementation. The shape formation control is first developed for point particle robots and then extended to nonholonomic mobile robots. Several simulations with robot groups of different sizes are presented to validate our proposed approach
Formation of Multiple Groups of Mobile Robots Using Sliding Mode Control
Formation control of multiple groups of agents finds application in large
area navigation by generating different geometric patterns and shapes, and also
in carrying large objects. In this paper, Centroid Based Transformation (CBT)
\cite{c39}, has been applied to decompose the combined dynamics of wheeled
mobile robots (WMRs) into three subsystems: intra and inter group shape
dynamics, and the dynamics of the centroid. Separate controllers have been
designed for each subsystem. The gains of the controllers are such chosen that
the overall system becomes singularly perturbed system. Then sliding mode
controllers are designed on the singularly perturbed system to drive the
subsystems on sliding surfaces in finite time. Negative gradient of a potential
based function has been added to the sliding surface to ensure collision
avoidance among the robots in finite time. The efficacy of the proposed
controller is established through simulation results.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figure
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