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    A Hierarchal Planning Framework for AUV Mission Management in a Spatio-Temporal Varying Ocean

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    The purpose of this paper is to provide a hierarchical dynamic mission planning framework for a single autonomous underwater vehicle (AUV) to accomplish task-assign process in a limited time interval while operating in an uncertain undersea environment, where spatio-temporal variability of the operating field is taken into account. To this end, a high level reactive mission planner and a low level motion planning system are constructed. The high level system is responsible for task priority assignment and guiding the vehicle toward a target of interest considering on-time termination of the mission. The lower layer is in charge of generating optimal trajectories based on sequence of tasks and dynamicity of operating terrain. The mission planner is able to reactively re-arrange the tasks based on mission/terrain updates while the low level planner is capable of coping unexpected changes of the terrain by correcting the old path and re-generating a new trajectory. As a result, the vehicle is able to undertake the maximum number of tasks with certain degree of maneuverability having situational awareness of the operating field. The computational engine of the mentioned framework is based on the biogeography based optimization (BBO) algorithm that is capable of providing efficient solutions. To evaluate the performance of the proposed framework, firstly, a realistic model of undersea environment is provided based on realistic map data, and then several scenarios, treated as real experiments, are designed through the simulation study. Additionally, to show the robustness and reliability of the framework, Monte-Carlo simulation is carried out and statistical analysis is performed. The results of simulations indicate the significant potential of the two-level hierarchical mission planning system in mission success and its applicability for real-time implementation

    SAFETY-GUARANTEED TASK PLANNING FOR BIPEDAL NAVIGATION IN PARTIALLY OBSERVABLE ENVIRONMENTS

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    Bipedal robots are becoming more capable as basic hardware and control challenges are being overcome, however reasoning about safety at the task and motion planning levels has been largely underexplored. I would like to make key steps towards guaranteeing safe locomotion in cluttered environments in the presence of humans or other dynamic obstacles by designing a hierarchical task planning framework that incorporates safety guarantees at each level. This layered planning framework is composed of a coarse high-level symbolic navigation planner and a lower-level local action planner. A belief abstraction at the global navigation planning level enables belief estimation of non-visible dynamic obstacle states and guarantees navigation safety with collision avoidance. Both planning layers employ linear temporal logic for a reactive game synthesis between the robot and its environment while incorporating lower level safe locomotion keyframe policies into formal task specification design. The high-level symbolic navigation planner has been extended to leverage the capabilities of a heterogeneous multi-agent team to resolve environment assumption violations that appear at runtime. Modifications in the navigation planner in conjunction with a coordination layer allow each agent to guarantee immediate safety and eventual task completion in the presence of an assumption violation if another agent exists that can resolve said violation, e.g. a door is closed that another dexterous agent can open. The planning framework leverages the expressive nature and formal guarantees of LTL to generate provably correct controllers for complex robotic systems. The use of belief space planning for dynamic obstacle belief tracking and heterogeneous robot capabilities to assist one another when environment assumptions are violated allows the planning framework to reduce the conservativeness traditionally associated with using formal methods for robot planning.M.S
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