Title :
A survey of animal foraging for directed, persistent search by rescue robotics
Author :
Suarez, Jesus ; Murphy, Robin
Author_Institution :
Center for Robot-Assisted Search & Rescue, Texas A&M Univ., College Station, TX, USA
Abstract :
This paper reviews the animal foraging literature for insights into the directed, persistent search problem in rescue robotics, where a robot may have to move away from a target or out of sensing range in order to find a path to it. The conclusions from 32 papers on empirical studies of insects, fish and birds, mammals, and 20 studies exploring theoretical models are that: robots should divide the environment into patches, they should follow a win-stay search strategy within a patch, use either a sensory- or pattern-based search algorithm, should adapt the algorithm to travel distance, total search time, physical obstacles, and availability of sensory information, and persistence should have a fixed time limit unless sensory information is available. The survey is expected to enable rescue roboticists to create better, or improve existing, search strategies and algorithms.
Keywords :
mobile robots; zoology; animal foraging literature; birds; directed persistent search problem; fish; insects; mammals; patches; physical obstacles; rescue robotics; sensory information availability; sensory-pattern-based search algorithm; total search time; travel distance; win-stay search strategy; Birds; Insects; Object oriented modeling; Robot sensing systems; Search problems; animal behavior; intelligent robots; mobile robots; robot motion;
Conference_Titel :
Safety, Security, and Rescue Robotics (SSRR), 2011 IEEE International Symposium on
Conference_Location :
Kyoto
Print_ISBN :
978-1-61284-770-2
DOI :
10.1109/SSRR.2011.6106744