DocumentCode
2101733
Title
MRSAM: a quadratically competitive multi-robot online navigation algorithm
Author
Sarid, Shahar ; Shapiro, Amir ; Gabriely, Yoav
Author_Institution
Dept. of Mech. Eng., Ben-Gurion Univ. of the Negev, Beer-Sheva
fYear
2006
fDate
15-19 May 2006
Firstpage
2699
Lastpage
2704
Abstract
We explore an online problem where a group of robots has to find a target whose position is unknown in an unknown planar environment whose geometry is acquired by the robots during task execution. The critical parameter in such a problem is the physical motion time, which, under the assumption of uniform velocity of all the robots, corresponds to length or cost of the path traveled by the robot which finds the target. The competitiveness of an online algorithm measures its performance relative to the optimal offline solution to the problem. While competitiveness usually means constant relative performance, this paper uses generalized competitiveness, i.e. any functional relationship between online performance and optimal offline solution. Given an online task, its competitive complexity class is a pair of lower and upper bounds on the competitive performance of all online algorithms for the task, such that the two bounds satisfy the same functional relationship. We classify a common online motion planning problem into competitive class. In particular, it is shown that group of robots navigation to a target whose position is recognized only upon arrival belongs to a quadratic competitive class. This paper describes a new online navigation algorithm, called MRSAM (short for multi-robot search area multiplication), which requires linear memory and has a quadratic competitive performance. Moreover, it is shown that in general any online navigation algorithm must have at least a quadratic competitive performance. The MRSAM algorithm achieves the quadratic lower bound and thus has optimal competitiveness. The algorithm´s performance is illustrated in an office-like environments
Keywords
mobile robots; motion control; multi-robot systems; path planning; competitive complexity class; linear memory; multi-robot search area multiplication; quadratically competitive multi-robot online navigation algorithm; Computational geometry; Costs; Mechanical engineering; Mobile robots; Motion planning; Navigation; Robot sensing systems; Service robots; Target recognition; Upper bound;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Robotics and Automation, 2006. ICRA 2006. Proceedings 2006 IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location
Orlando, FL
ISSN
1050-4729
Print_ISBN
0-7803-9505-0
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ROBOT.2006.1642109
Filename
1642109
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