• DocumentCode
    574696
  • Title

    The control theory of motion-based communication: Problems in teaching robots to dance

  • Author

    Baillieul, J. ; Ozcimder, Kayhan

  • fYear
    2012
  • fDate
    27-29 June 2012
  • Firstpage
    4319
  • Lastpage
    4326
  • Abstract
    The paper describes results on two components of a research program focused on motion-based communication mediated by the dynamics of a control system. Specifically we are interested in how mobile agents engaged in a shared activity such as dance can use motion as a medium for transmitting certain types of messages. The first part of the paper adopts the terminology of motion description languages and deconstructs an elementary form of the well-known popular dance, Salsa, in terms of four motion primitives (dance steps). Several notions of dance complexity are introduced. We describe an experiment in which ten performances by an actual pair of dancers are evaluated by judges and then compared in terms of proposed complexity metrics. An energy metric is also defined. Values of this metric are obtained by summing the lengths of motion segments executed by wheeled robots replicating the movements of the human dancers in each of the ten dance performances. Of all the metrics that are considered in this experiment, energy is the most closely correlated with the human judges´ assessments of performance quality. The second part of the paper poses a general class of dual objective motion control problems in which a primary objective (artistic execution of a dance step or efficient movement toward a specified terminal state) is combined with a communication objective. Solutions of varying degrees of explicitness can be given in several classes of problems of communicating through the dynamics of finite dimensional linear control systems. In this setting it is shown that the cost of adding a communication component to motions that steer a system between prescribed pairs of states is independent of those states. At the same time, the optimal encoding problem itself is shown to be a problem of packing geometric objects, and it remains open. Current research is aimed at solving such communication-through-action problems in the context of the motion control of mobile robots.
  • Keywords
    encoding; humanities; mobile robots; motion control; robot dynamics; teaching; wheels; Salsa; communication component; communication-through-action problem; complexity metrics; control theory; dance complexity; dual objective motion control problem; energy metric; finite dimensional linear control system dynamics; geometric object packing; mobile agent; mobile robot; motion description language; motion primitive; motion-based communication; optimal encoding problem; robot teaching; shared activity; system steering; wheeled robot; Complexity theory; Context; Correlation; Measurement; Mobile robots; Standards; action-mediated communication; control communication complexity; robot Salsa;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    American Control Conference (ACC), 2012
  • Conference_Location
    Montreal, QC
  • ISSN
    0743-1619
  • Print_ISBN
    978-1-4577-1095-7
  • Electronic_ISBN
    0743-1619
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/ACC.2012.6315286
  • Filename
    6315286