DocumentCode
1506830
Title
Control of distributed autonomous robotic systems using principles of pattern formation in nature and pedestrian behavior
Author
Molnár, Péter ; Starke, Jens
Author_Institution
Center for Theor. Studies of Phys. Syst., Clark Atlanta Univ., GA, USA
Volume
31
Issue
3
fYear
2001
fDate
6/1/2001 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
433
Lastpage
435
Abstract
Self-organized and error-resistant control of distributed autonomous robotic units in a manufacturing environment with obstacles where the robotic units have to be assigned to manufacturing targets in a cost effective way, is achieved by using two fundamental principles of nature. First, the selection behavior of modes is used which appears in pattern formation of physical, chemical and biological systems. Coupled selection equations based on these pattern formation principles can be used as dynamical system approach to assignment problems. These differential equations guarantee feasibility of the obtained solutions which is of great importance in industrial applications. Second, a model of behavioral forces is used, which has been successfully applied to describe self-organized crowd behavior of pedestrians. This novel approach includes collision avoidance as well as error resistivity. In particular, in systems where failures are of concern, the suggested approach outperforms conventional methods in covering up for sudden external changes like breakdowns of some robotic units. The capability of this system is demonstrated in computer simulations
Keywords
artificial intelligence; collision avoidance; differential equations; mobile robots; navigation; self-organising feature maps; computer simulations; distributed autonomous robotic systems; error resistivity; error-resistant control; manufacturing environment; pattern formation; pattern formation principles; pedestrian behavior; Biological systems; Chemicals; Control systems; Costs; Distributed control; Equations; Error correction; Manufacturing; Pattern formation; Robots;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Systems, Man, and Cybernetics, Part B: Cybernetics, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1083-4419
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/3477.931538
Filename
931538
Link To Document