ROJun 3, 2016

A Survey of Research on Control of Teams of Small Robots in Military Operations

arXiv:1606.01288v111 citations
Originality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

It addresses the problem of enhancing military operations through practical robot teams, but as a survey, it is incremental in summarizing existing work rather than presenting new findings.

This paper surveys research on controlling small military robots in squads of 3-10 units operating in complex, adversarial ground combat environments, focusing on coordinated autonomous behaviors beyond basic tasks like formation control.

While a number of excellent review articles on military robots have appeared in existing literature, this paper focuses on a distinct sub-space of related problems: small military robots organized into moderately sized squads, operating in a ground combat environment. Specifically, we consider the following: - Command of practical small robots, comparable to current generation, small unmanned ground vehicles (e.g., PackBots) with limited computing and sensor payload, as opposed to larger vehicle-sized robots or micro-scale robots; - Utilization of moderately sized practical forces of 3-10 robots applicable to currently envisioned military ground operations; - Complex three-dimensional physical environments, such as urban areas or mountainous terrains and the inherent difficulties they impose, including limited and variable fields of observation, difficult navigation, and intermittent communication; - Adversarial environments where the active, intelligent enemy is the key consideration in determining the behavior of the robotic force; and - Purposeful, partly autonomous, coordinated behaviors that are necessary for such a robotic force to survive and complete missions; these are far more complex than, for example, formation control or field coverage behavior.

Foundations

The foundational work for this paper's niche, ranked by how specifically the neighbourhood builds on it — not by global fame.

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