A helicopter named Dolly: Behavioural cloning for autonomous helicopter control


Autoria(s): Buskey, G. D.; Roberts, J.; Wyeth, G. F.
Contribuinte(s)

J. Roberts

G. Wyeth

Data(s)

01/01/2003

Resumo

This paper considers the pros and cons of using behavioural cloning for the development of low-level helicopter automation modules. Over the course of this project several Behavioural cloning approaches have been investigated. The results of the most effective Behavioural cloning approach are then compared to PID modules designed for the same aircraft. The comparison takes into consideration development time, reliability, and control performance. It has been found that Behavioural cloning techniques employing local approximators and a wide state-space coverage during training can produce stabilising control modules in less time than tuning PID controllers. However, performance and reliabity deficits have been found to exist with the Behavioural Cloning, attributable largely to the time variant nature of the dynamics due to the operating environment, and the pilot actions being poor for teaching. The final conclusion drawn here is that tuning PID modules remains superior to behavioural cloning for low-level helicopter automation.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:99325

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Australian Robotics and Automation Association (ARAA)

Palavras-Chave #Behavioural cloning #Helicopter automation #E1 #280209 Intelligent Robotics #700199 Computer software and services not elsewhere classified
Tipo

Conference Paper