Home /Research /Performance benefits of self-assembly in a swarm-bot
SWARM

Performance benefits of self-assembly in a swarm-bot

Rehan O’Grady, Roderich Groß, Anders Lyhne Christensen, Francesco Mondada, Michaël Bonani, Marco Dorigo

Year
2007
Citations
17

Abstract

Mobile robots are said to be capable of self- assembly when they can autonomously form physical connections with each other. Despite the recent proliferation of self- assembling systems, little work has been done on using self- assembly to add functional value to a robotic system, and even less on quantifying the contribution of self-assembly to system performance. In this study we demonstrate and quantify the performance benefits of i) acting as a physically larger self-assembled entity, ii) using self-assembly adaptively and iii) making the robots morphologically aware (the self-assembled robots leverage their new connected morphology in a task specific way). In our experiments, two real robots must navigate to a target over a-priori unknown terrain. In some cases the terrain can only be overcome by a self-assembled connected entity. In other cases, the robots can reach the target faster by navigating individually.

Keywords

Leverage (statistics)RobotComputer scienceTerrainMobile robotA priori and a posterioriSwarm roboticsHuman–computer interactionTask (project management)Artificial intelligence

Related papers

Browse all SWARM papers