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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Collective decision-making in decentralized multiple-robot systems: a biologically inspired approach to making up all of your minds

Parker, Christopher A. C. Unknown Date
No description available.
2

Collective decision-making in decentralized multiple-robot systems: a biologically inspired approach to making up all of your minds

Parker, Christopher A. C. 11 1900 (has links)
Decision-making is an important operation for any autonomous system. Robots in particular must observe their environment and compute appropriate responses. For solitary robots and centralized multiple-robot systems, decision-making is a relatively straightforward operation, since only a single agent (either the solitary robot or the single central controller) is solely responsible for the operation. The problem is much more complex in a decentralized system, to the point where optimal decision-making is intractable in the general case. Decentralized multiple-robot systems (dec-MRS) are robotic teams in which no robot is in authority over any others. The globally observed behaviour of dec-MRS emerges out of the individual robots’ local interactions with each other. This makes system-level decision-making, an operation in which an entire dec-MRS cooperatively makes a decision, a difficult problem. Social insects have long been a source of inspiration for dec-MRS research, and their example is followed in this work. Honeybees and Temnothorax ants must make group decisions in order to choose a new nest site whenever they relocate their colonies. Like the simple robots that compose typical dec-MRS, the insects utilize local, peer-to-peer behaviours to make good, cooperative decisions. This thesis examines their decision-making strategies in detail and proposes a three-phase framework for system-level decision-making by dec-MRS. Two different styles of decision are described, and experiments in both simulation and with real robots were carried out and presented here to demonstrate the framework’s decision-making ability. Using only local, anonymous communication and emergent behaviour, the proposed collective decision-making framework is able to make good decisions reliably, even in the presence of noisy individual sensing. Social cues such as consensus and quorum testing enables the robots to predicate their behaviour during the decision-making process on the global state of their system. Furthermore, because the operations carried out by the individual robots are so simple, and because their complexity to the individual robots is independent of the population size of a dec-MRS, the proposed decision-making framework will scale well to very large population sizes.
3

Situational Awareness Monitoring for Humans-In-The-Loop of Telepresence Robotic Systems

Kanyok, Nathan J. 21 November 2019 (has links)
No description available.
4

Automatic coordination and deployment of multi-robot systems

Smith, Brian Stephen 31 March 2009 (has links)
We present automatic tools for configuring and deploying multi-robot networks of decentralized, mobile robots. These methods are tailored to the decentralized nature of the multi-robot network and the limited information available to each robot. We present methods for determining if user-defined network tasks are feasible or infeasible for the network, considering the limited range of its sensors. To this end, we define rigid and persistent feasibility and present necessary and sufficient conditions (along with corresponding algorithms) for determining the feasibility of arbitrary, user-defined deployments. Control laws for moving multi-robot networks in acyclic, persistent formations are defined. We also present novel Embedded Graph Grammar Systems (EGGs) for coordinating and deploying the network. These methods exploit graph representations of the network, as well as graph-based rules that dictate how robots coordinate their control. Automatic systems are defined that allow the robots to assemble arbitrary, user-defined formations without any reliance on localization. Further, this system is augmented to deploy these formations at the user-defined, global location in the environment, despite limited localization of the network. The culmination of this research is an intuitive software program with a Graphical User Interface (GUI) and a satellite image map which allows users to enter the desired locations of sensors. The automatic tools presented here automatically configure an actual multi-robot network to deploy and execute user-defined network tasks.

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