Title :
Direct sensorimotor control for low-cost mobile tracking applications
Author :
Wilson, Denise Michelle ; Blom, Eric Dennis ; Marra, Michael A., III ; Walcott, Bruce Lanier
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. Eng., Washington Univ., Seattle, WA, USA
fDate :
8/1/2000 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
A biologically inspired system for tracking objects in a visual scene is presented. The uniqueness of the system is in the absence of a microcontroller to convert sensory information to tracking decisions, reducing power, size, weight, and cost of the overall system. The system consists of a mobile vehicle outfitted with a custom analog VLSI architecture for encoding the position of an object of interest in the vehicles´s field of view. Once determined, the object of interest retains hysteresis proportional to its size and intensity to limit the potential for distraction by other objects in the sensing environment. The encoded position of the object of interest is directly converted to a series of motor control signals to drive the vehicle in the direction of the object. The motor drive signals are pulse width modulated to control the speed and direction of travel induced by two de motors via a conventional differential steering arrangement. Neural oscillators are used to drive the de motors to provide a compact single-chip system for tracking bright objects. The nature of the system is sufficiently modular so that it can be adapted relatively easily to tracking other features of visual objects and even to objects representative of other sensing modalities. The system described here is one of the first efforts to fully integrate and apply analog VLSI (aVLSI) sensorimotor control to a mobile vehicle and to analyze the complete system from a control systems´ perspective. The system described here has the advantages of aVLSI integration in its small size (0.011-mm2 elements), low power (0.3 μW per element), and fast system response time (1.5 ms from sensory input to motor response)
Keywords :
VLSI; encoding; machine control; mobile robots; motor drives; position control; robot vision; tracking; velocity control; 1.5 ms; custom analog VLSI architecture; direct sensorimotor control; direction control; hysteresis; low-cost mobile tracking applications; mobile vehicle; motor control signals; motor drive signals; object position encoding; pulse width modulation; sensing environment; speed control; Biological information theory; Control systems; Costs; Hysteresis motors; Layout; Microcontrollers; Motor drives; Pulse width modulation; Vehicles; Very large scale integration;
Journal_Title :
Industrial Electronics, IEEE Transactions on