10 research outputs found
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Distributed Multi-Robot Algorithms for the TERMES 3D Collective Construction System
The research goal of collective construction is to develop systems in which large numbers of autonomous robots build large-scale structures according to desired specifications. We present algorithms for TERMES, a multi-robot construction system inspired by the building activities of termites. The system takes as input a high-level representation of a desired structure, and provides rules for an arbitrary number of simple climbing robots to build that structure, using passive solid building blocks under conditions of gravity. These rules are decentralized, rely on local information and implicit coordination, and provably guarantee correct completion of the target structure. Robots build staircases of blocks (potentially removable as temporary scaffolds) that they can climb to build structures much larger than themselves.Engineering and Applied Science
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Positional Communication and Private Information in Honeybee Foraging Models
Honeybees coordinate foraging efforts across vast areas through a complex system of advertising and recruitment. One mechanism for coordination is the waggle dance, a movement pattern which carries positional information about food sources. However, recent evidence suggests that recruited foragers may not use the dance’s positional information to the degree that has traditionally been believed. We model bee colony foraging to investigate the value of sharing food source position information in different environments. We find that in several environments, relying solely on private information about previously encountered food sources is more efficient than sharing information. Relying on private information leads to a greater diversity of forage sites and can decrease over-harvesting of sources. This is beneficial in environments with small quantities of nectar per flower, but may be detrimental in nectar-rich environments. Efficiency depends on both the environment and a balance between exploiting high-quality food sources and oversubscribing them.Engineering and Applied Science
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TERMES: An Autonomous Robotic System for Three-Dimensional Collective Construction
Collective construction is the research area in which autonomous multi-robot systems build structures according to user specifications. Here we present a hardware system and high-level control scheme for autonomous construction of 3D structures under conditions of gravity. The hardware comprises a mobile robot and specialized passive blocks; the robot is able to manipulate blocks to build desired structures, and can maneuver on these structures as well as in unstructured environments. We describe and evaluate the robot's key capabilities of climbing, navigation, and manipulation, and demonstrate its ability to perform complex tasks that combine these capabilities by having it autonomously build a ten-block staircase taller than itself. In addition, we outline a simple decentralized control algorithm by which multiple simultaneously active robots could autonomously build user-specified structures, working from a high-level description as input.Engineering and Applied Science
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Collective Decision-Making in Multi-Agent Systems by Implicit Leadership
Coordination within decentralized agent groups frequently requires reaching global consensus, but typical hierarchical approaches to reaching such decisions can be complex, slow, and not fault-tolerant. By contrast, recent studies have shown that in decentralized animal groups, a few individuals without privileged roles can guide the entire group to collective consensus on matters like travel direction. Inspired by these findings, we propose an implicit leadership algorithm for distributed multi-agent systems, which we prove reliably allows all agents to agree on a decision that can be determined by one or a few better-informed agents, through purely local sensing and interaction. The approach generalizes work on distributed consensus to cases where agents have different confidence levels in their preferred states. We present cases where informed agents share a common goal or have conflicting goals, and show how the number of informed agents and their confidence levels affects the consensus process. We further present an extension that allows for fast decision-making in a rapidly changing environment. Finally, we show how the framework can be applied to a diverse variety of applications, including mobile robot exploration, sensor network clock synchronization, and shape formation in modular robots.Engineering and Applied SciencesOther Research Uni