39.9MAMay 15
From Gridworlds to Warehouses: Adapting Lightweight One-shot Multi-Agent Pathfinding for AGVsHiroki Nagai, Keisuke Okumura
Multi-agent pathfinding (MAPF) under one-shot planning is a core component of warehouse automation, yet classical formulations typically assume four-connected 2D grids with unit-time moves in four directions. To fill reality gaps while still being trackable with discrete combinatorial search, this work proposes a more practical counterpart tailored to differential-drive AGVs. We term this multi-agent warehouse pathfinding (MAWPF), featured with four constraints: (i) agent actions are restricted to straight motion and in-place rotation; (ii) rotations require multi-step costs; (iii) acceleration and deceleration are considered, and; (iv) follower collisions are prohibited to prevent rear-end crashes. To solve MAWPF efficiently, we adapt representative suboptimal MAPF algorithms-PP, LNS2, PIBT, and LaCAM-and conduct comprehensive benchmarking. Our experiments reveal that PP and LNS2 struggle to solve instances with many agents, while PIBT-based approaches achieve preferable scalability with increased solution cost. We believe that these constitute an important step toward adapting classical gridworld MAPF to operational warehouse setups.
MAMay 19, 2025
Lightweight and Effective Preference Construction in PIBT for Large-Scale Multi-Agent PathfindingKeisuke Okumura, Hiroki Nagai
PIBT is a computationally lightweight algorithm that can be applied to a variety of multi-agent pathfinding (MAPF) problems, generating the next collision-free locations of agents given another. Because of its simplicity and scalability, it is becoming a popular underlying scheme for recent large-scale MAPF methods involving several hundreds or thousands of agents. Vanilla PIBT makes agents behave greedily towards their assigned goals, while agents typically have multiple best actions, since the graph shortest path is not always unique. Consequently, tiebreaking about how to choose between these actions significantly affects resulting solutions. This paper studies two simple yet effective techniques for tiebreaking in PIBT, without compromising its computational advantage. The first technique allows an agent to intelligently dodge another, taking into account whether each action will hinder the progress of the next timestep. The second technique is to learn, through multiple PIBT runs, how an action causes regret in others and to use this information to minimise regret collectively. Our empirical results demonstrate that these techniques can reduce the solution cost of one-shot MAPF and improve the throughput of lifelong MAPF. For instance, in densely populated one-shot cases, the combined use of these tiebreaks achieves improvements of around 10-20% in sum-of-costs, without significantly compromising the speed of a PIBT-based planner.
SPMay 26, 2023
Clustering Method for Time-Series Images Using Quantum-Inspired Computing TechnologyTomoki Inoue, Koyo Kubota, Tsubasa Ikami et al.
Time-series clustering serves as a powerful data mining technique for time-series data in the absence of prior knowledge about clusters. A large amount of time-series data with large size has been acquired and used in various research fields. Hence, clustering method with low computational cost is required. Given that a quantum-inspired computing technology, such as a simulated annealing machine, surpasses conventional computers in terms of fast and accurately solving combinatorial optimization problems, it holds promise for accomplishing clustering tasks that are challenging to achieve using existing methods. This study proposes a novel time-series clustering method that leverages an annealing machine. The proposed method facilitates an even classification of time-series data into clusters close to each other while maintaining robustness against outliers. Moreover, its applicability extends to time-series images. We compared the proposed method with a standard existing method for clustering an online distributed dataset. In the existing method, the distances between each data are calculated based on the Euclidean distance metric, and the clustering is performed using the k-means++ method. We found that both methods yielded comparable results. Furthermore, the proposed method was applied to a flow measurement image dataset containing noticeable noise with a signal-to-noise ratio of approximately 1. Despite a small signal variation of approximately 2%, the proposed method effectively classified the data without any overlap among the clusters. In contrast, the clustering results by the standard existing method and the conditional image sampling (CIS) method, a specialized technique for flow measurement data, displayed overlapping clusters. Consequently, the proposed method provides better results than the other two methods, demonstrating its potential as a superior clustering method.