65 research outputs found

    Past, present and future of path-planning algorithms for mobile robot navigation in dynamic environments

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    Mobile robots have been making a significant contribution to the advancement of many sectors including automation of mining, space, surveillance, military, health, agriculture and many more. Safe and efficient navigation is a fundamental requirement of mobile robots, thus, the demand for advanced algorithms rapidly increased. Mobile robot navigation encompasses the following four requirements: perception, localization, path-planning and motion control. Among those, path-planning is a vital part of a fast, secure operation. During the last couple of decades, many path-planning algorithms were developed. Despite most of the mobile robot applications being in dynamic environments, the number of algorithms capable of navigating robots in dynamic environments is limited. This paper presents a qualitative comparative study of the up-to-date mobile robot path-planning methods capable of navigating robots in dynamic environments. The paper discusses both classical and heuristic methods including artificial potential field, genetic algorithm, fuzzy logic, neural networks, artificial bee colony, particle swarm optimization, bacterial foraging optimization, ant-colony and Agoraphilic algorithm. The general advantages and disadvantages of each method are discussed. Furthermore, the commonly used state-of-the-art methods are critically analyzed based on six performance criteria: algorithm's ability to navigate in dynamically cluttered areas, moving goal hunting ability, object tracking ability, object path prediction ability, incorporating the obstacle velocity in the decision, validation by simulation and experimentation. This investigation benefits researchers in choosing suitable path-planning methods for different applications as well as identifying gaps in this field. © 2020 IEEE

    Adaptive and intelligent navigation of autonomous planetary rovers - A survey

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    The application of robotics and autonomous systems in space has increased dramatically. The ongoing Mars rover mission involving the Curiosity rover, along with the success of its predecessors, is a key milestone that showcases the existing capabilities of robotic technology. Nevertheless, there has still been a heavy reliance on human tele-operators to drive these systems. Reducing the reliance on human experts for navigational tasks on Mars remains a major challenge due to the harsh and complex nature of the Martian terrains. The development of a truly autonomous rover system with the capability to be effectively navigated in such environments requires intelligent and adaptive methods fitting for a system with limited resources. This paper surveys a representative selection of work applicable to autonomous planetary rover navigation, discussing some ongoing challenges and promising future research directions from the perspectives of the authors

    Experience-driven optimal motion synthesis in complex and shared environments

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    Optimal loco-manipulation planning and control for high-dimensional systems based on general, non-linear optimisation allows for the specification of versatile motion subject to complex constraints. However, complex, non-linear system and environment dynamics, switching contacts, and collision avoidance in cluttered environments introduce non-convexity and discontinuity in the optimisation space. This renders finding optimal solutions in complex and changing environments an open and challenging problem in robotics. Global optimisation methods can take a prohibitively long time to converge. Slow convergence makes them unsuitable for live deployment and online re-planning of motion policies in response to changes in the task or environment. Local optimisation techniques, in contrast, converge fast within the basin of attraction of a minimum but may not converge at all without a good initial guess as they can easily get stuck in local minima. Local methods are, therefore, a suitable choice provided we can supply a good initial guess. If a similarity between problems can be found and exploited, a memory of optimal solutions can be computed and compressed efficiently in an offline computation process. During runtime, we can query this memory to bootstrap motion synthesis by providing a good initial seed to the local optimisation solver. In order to realise such a system, we need to address several connected problems and questions: First, the formulation of the optimisation problem (and its parametrisation to allow solutions to transfer to new scenarios), and related, the type and granularity of user input, along with a strategy for recovery and feedback in case of unexpected changes or failure. Second, a sampling strategy during the database/memory generation that explores the parameter space efficiently without resorting to exhaustive measures---i.e., to balance storage size/memory with online runtime to adapt/repair the initial guess. Third, the question of how to represent the problem and environment to parametrise, compute, store, retrieve, and exploit the memory efficiently during pre-computation and runtime. One strategy to make the problem computationally tractable is to decompose planning into a series of sequential sub-problems, e.g., contact-before-motion approaches which sequentially perform goal state planning, contact planning, motion planning, and encoding. Here, subsequent stages operate within the null-space of the constraints of the prior problem, such as the contact mode or sequence. This doctoral thesis follows this line of work. It investigates general optimisation-based formulations for motion synthesis along with a strategy for exploration, encoding, and exploitation of a versatile memory-of-motion for providing an initial guess to optimisation solvers. In particular, we focus on manipulation in complex environments with high-dimensional robot systems such as humanoids and mobile manipulators. The first part of this thesis focuses on collision-free motion generation to reliably generate motions. We present a general, collision-free inverse kinematics method using a combination of gradient-based local optimisation with random/evolution strategy restarting to achieve high success rates and avoid local minima. We use formulations for discrete collision avoidance and introduce a novel, computationally fast continuous collision avoidance objective based on conservative advancement and harmonic potential fields. Using this, we can synthesise continuous-time collision-free motion plans in the presence of moving obstacles. It further enables to discretise trajectories with fewer waypoints, which in turn considerably reduces the optimisation problem complexity, and thus, time to solve. The second part focuses on problem representations and exploration. We first introduce an efficient solution encoding for trajectory library-based approaches. This representation, paired with an accompanying exploration strategy for offline pre-computation, permits the application of inexpensive distance metrics during runtime. We demonstrate how our method efficiently re-uses trajectory samples, increases planning success rates, and reduces planning time while being highly memory-efficient. We subsequently present a method to explore the topological features of the solution space using tools from computational homology. This enables us to cluster solutions according to their inherent structure which increases the success of warm-starting for problems with discontinuities and multi-modality. The third part focuses on real-world deployment in laboratory and field experiments as well as incorporating user input. We present a framework for robust shared autonomy with a focus on continuous scene monitoring for assured safety. This framework further supports interactive adjustment of autonomy levels from fully teleoperated to automatic execution of stored behaviour sequences. Finally, we present sensing and control for the integration and embodiment of the presented methodology in high-dimensional real-world platforms used in laboratory experiments and real-world deployment. We validate our presented methods using hardware experiments on a variety of robot platforms demonstrating generalisation to other robots and environments

    Self-limitation, dynamic and flexible approaches for particle swarm optimisation

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    Swarm Intelligence (SI) is one of the prominent techniques employed to solve optimisation problems. It has been applied to problems pertaining to engineering, schedule, planning, networking and design. However, this technique has two main limitations. First, the SI technique may not be suitable for the online applications, as it does not have the same aspects of limitations as an online platform. Second, setting the parameter for SI techniques to produce the most promising outcome is challenging. Therefore, this research has been conducted to overcome these two limitations. Based on the literature, Particle Swarm Optimisation (PSO) was selected as the main SI for this research, due to its proven performances, abilities and simplicity. Five new techniques were created based on the PSO technique in order to address the two limitations. The first two techniques focused on the first limitation, while the other three techniques focused on the latter. Three main experiments (benchmark problems, engineering problems, path planning problems) were designed to assess the capabilities and performances of these five new techniques. These new techniques were also compared against several other well-established SI techniques such as the Genetic Algorithm (GA), Differential Equation (DE) and Cuckoo Search Algorithm (CSA). Potential Field (PF), Probabilistic Road Map (PRM), Rapidly-explore Random Tree (RRT) and Dijkstra’s Algorithm (DA) were also included in the path planning problem in order to compare these new techniques’ performances against Classical methods of path planning. Results showed all five introduced techniques managed to outperform or at least perform as good as well-established techniques in all three experiments

    Haptic Guidance for Extended Range Telepresence

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    A novel navigation assistance for extended range telepresence is presented. The haptic information from the target environment is augmented with guidance commands to assist the user in reaching desired goals in the arbitrarily large target environment from the spatially restricted user environment. Furthermore, a semi-mobile haptic interface was developed, one whose lightweight design and setup configuration atop the user provide for an absolutely safe operation and high force display quality

    Improvement of Robot Path Planning by Brain Storm Algorithm

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    Trajectory optimization of multiple quad-rotor UAVs in collaborative assembling task

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    A hierarchic optimization strategy based on the offline path planning process and online trajectory planning process is presented to solve the trajectory optimization problem of multiple quad-rotor unmanned aerial vehicles in the collaborative assembling task. Firstly, the path planning process is solved by a novel parallel intelligent optimization algorithm, the central force optimization-genetic algorithm (CFO-GA), which combines the central force optimization (CFO) algorithm with the genetic algorithm (GA). Because of the immaturity of the CFO, the convergence analysis of the CFO is completed by the stability theory of the linear time-variant discrete-time systems. The results show that the parallel CFO-GA algorithm converges faster than the parallel CFO and the central force optimization-sequential quadratic programming (CFO-SQP) algorithm. Then, the trajectory planning problem is established based on the path planning results. In order to limit the range of the attitude angle and guarantee the flight stability, the optimized object is changed from the ordinary six-degree-of-freedom rigid-body dynamic model to the dynamic model with an inner-loop attitude controller. The results show that the trajectory planning process can be solved by the mature SQP algorithm easily. Finally, the discussion and analysis of the real-time performance of the hierarchic optimization strategy are presented around the group number of the waypoints and the equal interval time

    On the use of autonomous unmanned vehicles in response to hazardous atmospheric release incidents

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    Recent events have induced a surge of interest in the methods of response to releases of hazardous materials or gases into the atmosphere. In the last decade there has been particular interest in mapping and quantifying emissions for regulatory purposes, emergency response, and environmental monitoring. Examples include: responding to events such as gas leaks, nuclear accidents or chemical, biological or radiological (CBR) accidents or attacks, and even exploring sources of methane emissions on the planet Mars. This thesis presents a review of the potential responses to hazardous releases, which includes source localisation, boundary tracking, mapping and source term estimation. [Continues.]</div
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