Robust Agent Control of an Autonomous Robot with Many Sensors and Actuators


Autoria(s): Ferrell, Cynthia
Data(s)

20/10/2004

20/10/2004

01/05/1993

Resumo

This thesis presents methods for implementing robust hexpod locomotion on an autonomous robot with many sensors and actuators. The controller is based on the Subsumption Architecture and is fully distributed over approximately 1500 simple, concurrent processes. The robot, Hannibal, weighs approximately 6 pounds and is equipped with over 100 physical sensors, 19 degrees of freedom, and 8 on board computers. We investigate the following topics in depth: distributed control of a complex robot, insect-inspired locomotion control for gait generation and rough terrain mobility, and fault tolerance. The controller was implemented, debugged, and tested on Hannibal. Through a series of experiments, we examined Hannibal's gait generation, rough terrain locomotion, and fault tolerance performance. These results demonstrate that Hannibal exhibits robust, flexible, real-time locomotion over a variety of terrain and tolerates a multitude of hardware failures.

Formato

165 p.

1861362 bytes

3933255 bytes

application/octet-stream

application/pdf

Identificador

AITR-1443

http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/6791

Idioma(s)

en_US

Relação

AITR-1443

Palavras-Chave #distributed control #autonomous robot #fualt tolerance #sadaptive behavior #legged locomotion #behavior based control