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Collective robotics: from local perception to global action

C. Ronald Kube

Year
1997
Citations
24

Abstract

Does coherent behaviour require an explicit mechanism of cooperation? In this dissertation, the relationship between local perception and global action in a system of multiple mobile robots was examined for a collective box-pushing task. The problem investigated was how local sensing could be used to coordinate the individual motor responses of a system of robots in a coherent manner, using only implicit communication through the task. The task was to move a large box from an initially unknown position to a specified goal location. The central thesis put forward, is that for the box-pushing task a coherent behaviour is possible, without an explicit mechanism of cooperation, by using the mass effect of a system of redundant robots. Preliminary work in collective robotics appeared to lend weight to the hypothesis that collective tasks, by multi-robot systems, are possible without centralized control or explicit inter-robot communications, two common control mechanisms used for cooperati...

Keywords

RobotTask (project management)Artificial intelligenceRoboticsComputer scienceAction (physics)PerceptionHuman–computer interactionEngineeringPsychology

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