DocumentCode
3518794
Title
Multi-robot information sharing for complementing limited perception: A case study of moving ball interception
Author
Wang, Ruiqi ; Veloso, Marco ; Seshan, Srinivasan
fYear
2013
fDate
6-10 May 2013
Firstpage
1884
Lastpage
1889
Abstract
Poor sensor data because of uncertainty and hardware limitations results in a robot misinterpreting the state of its surrounding environment, leading to bad decisions and eventually failure to successfully perform its desired tasks. These limitations can be overcome if a teammate robot with a better view shares its visual information. Our work aims to investigate why current approaches fail to effectively use teammate sensor data, propose an alternative where a teammate helps to better capture the state of the environment, and demonstrate that the robot can make better decisions when a teammate shares its perceptual data. Raw teammate sensor data is not meaningful unless provided a relative, geometric transform to place this data within another robot´s own egocentric coordinates. There are few approaches that are able to discover this relative localization accurately in sparse environments while remaining computationally light. Our approach addresses these limitations by accumulating correspondence matches of objects over time from the overlapping views of two stationary robots to compute an accurate relative localization. We evaluate the benefits of teammate sensor data used with our computed relative localization with a challenging, time critical task where the robot´s cameras alone are lacking. Our empirical results with two coordinating robots indicates that our approach is able to successfully take advantage of teammate robots with a better view within the challenging physical and hardware constraints of our robots.
Keywords
multi-robot systems; path planning; computed relative localization; coordinating robots; moving ball interception; multirobot information sharing; raw teammate sensor data; relative geometric transform; robot egocentric coordinates; stationary robots; teammate robot; time critical task; visual information; Cameras; Legged locomotion; Robot kinematics; Robot sensing systems; Trajectory; Transforms;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Robotics and Automation (ICRA), 2013 IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location
Karlsruhe
ISSN
1050-4729
Print_ISBN
978-1-4673-5641-1
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ICRA.2013.6630826
Filename
6630826
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