DocumentCode :
3499503
Title :
Problems of temporal granularity in robot control: Levels of adaptation and a necessity of self-confidence
Author :
Wagatsuma, Hiroaki ; Tomonaga, Yousuke
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Brain Sci. & Eng., Kyushu Inst. of Technol., Kitakyushu, Japan
fYear :
2011
fDate :
July 31 2011-Aug. 5 2011
Firstpage :
2670
Lastpage :
2675
Abstract :
The granularity of “action” within a system is highly depending on the internal representation for the task, or intention of what to do if it is a biological system. In the same time, there are several levels of adaptation when the system tries to complete a mission. The problem of choosing the right level of action representation is essential for robot controls as well as in learning paradigms. Both tend to use low-granularity and transfer the processed information to upper levels constructively. However the system never guarantees the completion time of the mission if the system is composed of stiff functional blocks with a specific temporal granularity at the bottom level. However, we biological system have an ability to manage the global time for scheduling and reorganization of tasks to finish by the deadline. Brain-inspired robotics allows us to investigate a distributed parallel information system, the brain, with the ability of time management as a real time control system of the physical body through flexible planning of necessary actions by interacting with the real environment. It is an extension of subsumption approaches that fixed a set of behaviors as the basic unit of action in the viewpoint of temporal property. By focusing on the temporal granularity as a consequence of coordination among multiple levels, a self-confident robot control may arise from a coupling between top-down or purpose-oriented decomposition of the purpose to primitive functions with flexible time windows and bottom-up of sensori-motor reactions in dynamic environments.
Keywords :
control engineering computing; learning (artificial intelligence); planning (artificial intelligence); real-time systems; robots; scheduling; biological system; brain-inspired robotics; distributed parallel information system; learning paradigms; planning; purpose-oriented decomposition; realtime control system; robot control; stiff functional blocks; task reorganization; task scheduling; time management; top-down decomposition; Cameras; Legged locomotion; Real time systems; Robot kinematics; Robot vision systems; Trajectory;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Neural Networks (IJCNN), The 2011 International Joint Conference on
Conference_Location :
San Jose, CA
ISSN :
2161-4393
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-9635-8
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/IJCNN.2011.6033568
Filename :
6033568
Link To Document :
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