Temporally-Sampled Efficiently Adaptive State Lattices for Autonomous Ground Robot Navigation in Partially Observed Environments
Ashwin Satish Menon, Eric R. Damm, Eli S. Lancaster, Felix A. Sanchez, Jason M. Gregory, Thomas M. Howard
- Year
- 2026
- Access
- Open access
Abstract
Due to sensor limitations, environments that off-road mobile robots operate in are often only partially observable. As the robots move throughout the environment and towards their goal, the optimal route is continuously revised as the sensors perceive new information. In traditional autonomous navigation architectures, a regional motion planner will consume the environment map and output a trajectory for the local motion planner to use as a reference. Due to the continuous revision of the regional plan guidance as a result of changing map information, the reference trajectories which are passed down to the local planner can differ significantly across sequential planning cycles. This rapidly changing guidance can result in unsafe navigation behavior, often requiring manual safety interventions during autonomous traversals in off-road environments. To remedy this problem, we propose Temporally-Sampled Efficiently Adaptive State Lattices (TSEASL), which is a regional planner arbitration architecture that considers updated and optimized versions of previously generated trajectories against the currently generated trajectory. When tested on a Clearpath Robotics Warthog Unmanned Ground Vehicle as well as real map data collected from the Warthog, results indicate that when running TSEASL, the robot did not require manual interventions in the same locations where the robot was running the baseline planner. Additionally, higher levels of planner stability were recorded with TSEASL over the baseline. The paper concludes with a discussion of further improvements to TSEASL in order to make it more generalizable to various off-road autonomy scenarios.
Keywords
Related papers
A dual-loop framework for manufacturability-aware topology optimization of electric vehicle structures via wire arc additive manufacturing
Qiang Cui, Chuan Yu, Daoqian Yang +2 more
Robotics and Computer-Integrated Manufacturing · 2026
Geometric digital twin: A digital and intelligent model for aero-engine assembly accuracy prediction
Ke Shang, Xin Jin, Teli Xu +4 more
Robotics and Computer-Integrated Manufacturing · 2026
Design and dynamic performance prediction of a novel large-aperture offset-feed deployable antenna
Chuang Shi, Tianming Liu, Ning Xue +6 more
Aerospace Science and Technology · 2026
Revolutionizing Industries Through AI-Driven Robotics
Aryan Chaudhary
Recent Advances in Computer Science and Communications · 2026