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MANIPULATION

HERMIES-I: a mobile robot for navigation and manipulation experiments

C.R. Weisbin, J. Barhen, G. de Saussure, W.R. Hamel, C.C. Jorgensen, J.L. Lucius, E.M. Oblow, Theresa Swift

Year
1985
Citations
6

Abstract

The purpose of this paper is to report the current status of investigations ongoing at the Center for Engineering Systems Advanced Research (CESAR) in the areas of navigation and manipulation in unstructured environments. The HERMIES-I mobile robot, a prototype of a series which contains many of the major features needed for remote work in hazardous environments is discussed. Initial experimental work at CESAR has begun in the area of navigation. It briefly reviews some of the ongoing research in autonomous navigation and describes initial research with HERMIES-I and associated graphic simulation. Since the HERMIES robots will generally be composed of a variety of asynchronously controlled hardware components (such as manipulator arms, digital image sensors, sonars, etc.) it seems appropriate to consider future development of the HERMIES brain as a hypercube ensemble machine with concurrent computation and associated message passing. The basic properties of such a hypercube architecture are presented. Decision-making under uncertainty eventually permeates all of our work. Following a survey of existing analytical approaches, it was decided that a stronger theoretical basis is required. As such, this paper presents the framework for a recently developed hybrid uncertainty theory. 21 refs., 2 figs.

Keywords

Computer scienceMobile robotRobotArtificial intelligenceMobile robot navigationMotion planningVariety (cybernetics)ArchitectureHuman–computer interactionSimulation

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