RONESep 19, 2020

Co-Evolution of Multi-Robot Controllers and Task Cues for Off-World Open Pit Mining

arXiv:2009.09149v1
AI Analysis

This addresses the challenge of efficient resource gathering with autonomous robot fleets in off-world environments, though it appears incremental as it builds on existing ANT architecture with added templates and cues.

The paper tackles the problem of scaling productivity in multi-robot open-pit mining on the Moon by developing scalable controllers that avoid human scripting and detailed modeling, showing that light beacons and task cues effectively improve robot performance under time constraints.

Robots are ideal for open-pit mining on the Moon as its a dull, dirty, and dangerous task. The challenge is to scale up productivity with an ever-increasing number of robots. This paper presents a novel method for developing scalable controllers for use in multi-robot excavation and site-preparation scenarios. The controller starts with a blank slate and does not require human-authored operations scripts nor detailed modeling of the kinematics and dynamics of the excavator. The 'Artificial Neural Tissue' (ANT) architecture is used as a control system for autonomous robot teams to perform resource gathering. This control architecture combines a variable-topology neural-network structure with a coarse-coding strategy that permits specialized areas to develop in the tissue. Our work in this field shows that fleets of autonomous decentralized robots have an optimal operating density. Too few robots result in insufficient labor, while too many robots cause antagonism, where the robots undo each other's work and are stuck in gridlock. In this paper, we explore the use of templates and task cues to improve group performance further and minimize antagonism. Our results show light beacons and task cues are effective in sparking new and innovative solutions at improving robot performance when placed under stressful situations such as severe time-constraint.

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