Riku Funada

RO
4papers
30citations
Novelty44%
AI Score38

4 Papers

ROMay 12
Feasible Force Set Shaping for a Payload-Carrying Platform Consisting of Tiltable Multiple UAVs Connected Via Passive Hinge Joints

Takumi Ito, Hayato Kawashima, Riku Funada et al.

This paper presents a method for shaping the feasible force set of a payload-carrying platform composed of multiple Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs) and proposes a control law that leverages the advantages of this shaped force set. The UAVs are connected to the payload through passively rotatable hinge joints. The joint angles are controlled by the differential thrust produced by the rotors, while the total force generated by all the rotors is responsible for controlling the payload. The shape of the set of the total force depends on the tilt angles of the UAVs, which allows us to shape the feasible force set by adjusting these tilt angles. This paper aims to ensure that the feasible force set encompasses the required shape, enabling the platform to generate force redundantly -meaning in various directions. We then propose a control law that takes advantage of this redundancy.

ROSep 28, 2021
Gaussian Belief Space Path Planning for Minimum Sensing Navigation

Ali Reza Pedram, Riku Funada, Takashi Tanaka

We propose a path planning methodology for a mobile robot navigating through an obstacle-filled environment to generate a reference path that is traceable with moderate sensing efforts. The desired reference path is characterized as the shortest path in an obstacle-filled Gaussian belief manifold equipped with a novel information-geometric distance function. The distance function we introduce is shown to be an asymmetric quasi-pseudometric and can be interpreted as the minimum information gain required to steer the Gaussian belief. An RRT*-based numerical solution algorithm is presented to solve the formulated shortest-path problem. To gain insight into the asymptotic optimality of the proposed algorithm, we show that the considered path length function is continuous with respect to the topology of total variation. Simulation results demonstrate that the proposed method is effective in various robot navigation scenarios to reduce sensing costs, such as the required frequency of sensor measurements and the number of sensors that must be operated simultaneously.

ROSep 27, 2021
Dynamic Allocation of Visual Attention for Vision-based Autonomous Navigation under Data Rate Constraints

Ali Reza Pedram, Riku Funada, Takashi Tanaka

This paper considers the problem of task-dependent (top-down) attention allocation for vision-based autonomous navigation using known landmarks. Unlike the existing paradigm in which landmark selection is formulated as a combinatorial optimization problem, we model it as a resource allocation problem where the decision-maker (DM) is granted extra freedom to control the degree of attention to each landmark. The total resource available to DM is expressed in terms of the capacity limit of the in-take information flow, which is quantified by the directed information from the state of the environment to the DM's observation. We consider a receding horizon implementation of such a controlled sensing scheme in the Linear-Quadratic-Gaussian (LQG) regime. The convex-concave procedure is applied in each time step, whose time complexity is shown to be linear in the horizon length if the alternating direction method of multipliers (ADMM) is used. Numerical studies show that the proposed formulation is sparsity-promoting in the sense that it tends to allocate zero data rate to uninformative landmarks.

ROFeb 28, 2020
Rationally Inattentive Path-Planning via RRT*

Jeb Stefan, Ali Reza Pedram, Riku Funada et al.

We consider a path-planning scenario for a mobile robot traveling in a configuration space with obstacles under the presence of stochastic disturbances. A novel path length metric is proposed on the uncertain configuration space and then integrated with the existing RRT* algorithm. The metric is a weighted sum of two terms which capture both the Euclidean distance traveled by the robot and the perception cost, i.e., the amount of information the robot must perceive about the environment to follow the path safely. The continuity of the path length function with respect to the topology of the total variation metric is shown and the optimality of the Rationally Inattentive RRT* algorithm is discussed. Three numerical studies are presented which display the utility of the new algorithm.