Home /Research /Shared autonomy system for tracked vehicles to traverse rough terrain based on continuous three-dimensional terrain scanning
HRI

Shared autonomy system for tracked vehicles to traverse rough terrain based on continuous three-dimensional terrain scanning

Yoshito Okada, Keiji Nagatani, Kazuya Yoshida, Tomoaki Yoshida, Eiji Koyanagi

Year
2010
Citations
18

Abstract

Tracked vehicles are frequently used as search-and-rescue robots for exploring disaster areas. To enhance their traversability on rough terrain, some are equipped with “active flippers.” However, manual control of such flippers also increases the operator's workload, particularly for teleoperation with limited camera views. To eliminate this tradeoff, we developed a shared autonomy system using an autonomous controller for flippers that is based on continuous three-dimensional terrain scanning. In our system, real-time terrain slices near the robot are obtained using three laser range sensors, and these are integrated to generate three-dimensional terrain information. In this paper, we introduce the autonomous controller for the flippers and validate the reliability of the shared autonomy system through experimental results on actual rough terrain.

Keywords

TerrainTraverseTeleoperationRobotComputer scienceController (irrigation)WorkloadComputer visionSimulationReliability (semiconductor)

Related papers

Browse all HRI papers