DocumentCode
2408196
Title
On coordination in practical multi-robot patrol
Author
Agmon, Noa ; Fok, Chien-Liang ; Emaliah, Yehuda ; Stone, Peter ; Julien, Christine ; Vishwanath, Sriram
Author_Institution
Dept. of Comput. Sci., Univ. of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX, USA
fYear
2012
fDate
14-18 May 2012
Firstpage
650
Lastpage
656
Abstract
Multi-robot patrol is a fundamental application of multi-robot systems. While much theoretical work exists providing an understanding of the optimal patrol strategy for teams of coordinated homogeneous robots, little work exists on building and evaluating the performance of such systems for real. In this paper, we evaluate the performance of multirobot patrol in a practical outdoor distributed robotic system, and evaluate the effect of different coordination schemes on the performance of the robotic team. The multi-robot patrol algorithms evaluated vary in the level of robot coordination: no coordination, loose coordination, and tight coordination. In addition, we evaluate versions of these algorithms that distribute state information-either individual state, or entire team state (global-view state). Our experiments show that while tight coordination is theoretically optimal, it is not practical in practice. Instead, uncoordinated patrol performs best in terms of average waypoint visitation frequency, though loosely coordinated patrol that shares only individual state performed best in terms of worst-case frequency. Both are significantly better than a loosely coordinated algorithm based on sharing global-view state. We respond to this discrepancy between theory and practice, caused primarily by robot heterogeneity, by extending the theory to account for such heterogeneity, and find that the new theory accounts for the empirical results.
Keywords
mobile robots; multi-robot systems; optimal control; average waypoint visitation frequency; coordinated homogeneous robot team; entire team state; global-view state; individual state; loose coordination; multirobot systems; no coordination; optimal patrol strategy; practical multirobot patrol coordination; practical outdoor distributed robotic system; robot heterogeneity; tight coordination; worst-case frequency; Compass; GSM; Global Positioning System; Mobile robots; Robot kinematics; Robot sensing systems;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Robotics and Automation (ICRA), 2012 IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location
Saint Paul, MN
ISSN
1050-4729
Print_ISBN
978-1-4673-1403-9
Electronic_ISBN
1050-4729
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ICRA.2012.6224708
Filename
6224708
Link To Document