Home /Research /Assistive formation maintenance for human-led multi-robot systems
SWARM

Assistive formation maintenance for human-led multi-robot systems

Lonnie T. Parker, Ayanna Howard

Year
2009
Citations
2

Abstract

In ground-based military maneuvers, group formations require flexibility when traversing from one point to the next. For a human-led team of semi-autonomous agents, a certain level of awareness demonstrated by the agents regarding the quality of the formation is preferable. Through the use of a Multi-Robot System (MRS), this work combines leader-follower principles augmented by an assistive formation maintenance (AFM) method to improve formation keeping and demonstrate a formation-in-motion concept. This is achieved using the Robot Mean Task Allocation method (RTMA), a strategy used to allocate formation positions to each unit within a continuously mobile MRS. The end goal is to provide a military application that allows a soldier to efficiently tele-operate a semi-autonomous MRS capable of holding formation amidst a cluttered environment. Baseline simulation is performed in Player/Stage to show the applicability of our developed model and its potential for expansive research.

Keywords

Flexibility (engineering)ExpansiveComputer scienceTask (project management)Baseline (sea)TraverseRobotMobile robotHuman–computer interactionWork (physics)

Related papers

Browse all SWARM papers