Home /Research /Mobile Robotics in Agricultural Operations: A Narrative Review on Planning Aspects
LOCOMOTION

Mobile Robotics in Agricultural Operations: A Narrative Review on Planning Aspects

Vasileios Moysiadis, Naoum Tsolakis, Dimitris Katikaridis, Claus Aage Grøn Sørensen, Simon Pearson, Dionysis Bochtis

Year
2020
Citations
103
Access
Open access

Abstract

The advent of mobile robots in agriculture has signaled a digital transformation with new automation technologies optimize a range of labor-intensive, resources-demanding, and time-consuming agri-field operations. To that end a generally accepted technical lexicon for mobile robots is lacking as pertinent terms are often used interchangeably. This creates confusion among research and practice stakeholders. In addition, a consistent definition of planning attributes in automated agricultural operations is still missing as relevant research is sparse. In this regard, a “narrative” review was adopted (1) to provide the basic terminology over technical aspects of mobile robots used in autonomous operations and (2) assess fundamental planning aspects of mobile robots in agricultural environments. Based on the synthesized evidence from extant studies, seven planning attributes have been included: (i) high-level control-specific attributes, which include reasoning architecture, the world model, and planning level, (ii) operation-specific attributes, which include locomotion–task connection and capacity constraints, and (iii) physical robot-specific attributes, which include vehicle configuration and vehicle kinematics.

Keywords

TerminologyComputer scienceMobile robotRoboticsArtificial intelligenceRobotAutomationHuman–computer interactionEngineering

Related papers

Browse all LOCOMOTION papers