ROMay 11, 2017

Swarm-Enabling Technology for Multi-Robot Systems

arXiv:1705.04010v169 citations
Originality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

This work provides a practical solution for practitioners and hobbyists to retrofit existing low-cost robots into swarms, though it is incremental as it builds on existing swarm robotics concepts.

The authors tackled the problem of enabling swarming in general-purpose robotic systems by developing a modular and transferable technology combining software and low-cost hardware, which was successfully implemented on two distinct multi-robot systems for collective tasks like exploration and search in uncontrolled environments.

Swarm robotics has experienced a rapid expansion in recent years, primarily fueled by specialized multi-robot systems developed to achieve dedicated collective actions. These specialized platforms are in general designed with swarming considerations at the front and center. Key hardware and software elements required for swarming are often deeply embedded and integrated with the particular system. However, given the noticeable increase in the number of low-cost mobile robots readily available, practitioners and hobbyists may start considering to assemble full-fledged swarms by minimally retrofitting such mobile platforms with a swarm-enabling technology. Here, we report one possible embodiment of such a technology designed to enable the assembly and the study of swarming in a range of general-purpose robotic systems. This is achieved by combining a modular and transferable software toolbox with a hardware suite composed of a collection of low-cost and off-the-shelf components. The developed technology can be ported to a relatively vast range of robotic platforms with minimal changes and high levels of scalability. This swarm-enabling technology has successfully been implemented on two distinct distributed multi-robot systems, a swarm of mobile marine buoys and a team of commercial terrestrial robots. We have tested the effectiveness of both of these distributed robotic systems in performing collective exploration and search scenarios, as well as other classical cooperative behaviors. Experimental results on different swarm behaviors are reported for the two platforms in uncontrolled environments and without any supporting infrastructure. The design of the associated software library allows for a seamless switch to other cooperative behaviors, and also offers the possibility to simulate newly designed collective behaviors prior to their implementation onto the platforms.

Code Implementations1 repo
Foundations

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

Your Notes