A Successive-Elimination Approach to Adaptive Robotic Sensing
Esther Rolf, David Fridovich-Keil, Max Simchowitz, Benjamin Recht, Claire Tomlin
- Year
- 2018
- Access
- Open access
Abstract
We study an adaptive source seeking problem, in which a mobile robot must identify the strongest emitter(s) of a signal in an environment with background emissions. Background signals may be highly heterogeneous and can mislead algorithms that are based on receding horizon control. We propose AdaSearch, a general algorithm for adaptive source seeking in the face of heterogeneous background noise. AdaSearch combines global trajectory planning with principled confidence intervals in order to concentrate measurements in promising regions while guaranteeing sufficient coverage of the entire area. Theoretical analysis shows that AdaSearch confers gains over a uniform sampling strategy when the distribution of background signals is highly variable. Simulation experiments demonstrate that when applied to the problem of radioactive source seeking, AdaSearch outperforms both uniform sampling and a receding time horizon information-maximization approach based on the current literature. We also demonstrate AdaSearch in hardware, providing further evidence of its potential for real-time implementation.
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
Revolutionizing Industries Through AI-Driven Robotics
Aryan Chaudhary
Recent Advances in Computer Science and Communications · 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