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Follow the leader
Whether driving on the highway or walking down the street, we pick up
on both deliberate signals and unconscious cues (signals) to predict
what other people are going to do and act accordingly. But robots have
trouble following each other around, for example, when a leader turns a
corner and disappears from sight.
Researchers at UC(University of California)Davis have come up with a
control system that allows a robot to pick up on cues that the leader is
about to turn, predict where it is going and follow it.
"The following problem is a quite fundamental (basic) problem in
robotics," said Sanjay Joshi, associate professor of mechanical and
aeronautical engineering at UC Davis. Robots that are better at
following could be easier for people to work with, he said. A hospital
robot could follow a doctor around the wards.
Humans use signals and unconscious cues to build a model that
predicts where other people are going. Behavioural studies show that
people unconsciously turn their heads a fraction of a second before
making a left or right turn. Joshi and his team of researchers developed
a control system that could take such behavioural cues into account in
making decisions about which way to move.
Joshi, graduate student Michael Chueh, and undergraduate students
William Au Yeung and Calvin Lei tested the system using a small
commercially available robot, the Evolution Robotics Scorpion. The
robot's camera could identify a target on the lead robot, and the
robot's onboard computer could combine the target information with
behavioural cue information.
Rather than have the lead robot signal the follower directly, the
research team sent "behavioural cues" to the follower via wireless link.
Effectively, the cues told the robot, "the leader might be about to turn
right" or "might be about to turn left."
To develop a decision on how to move, the follower robot was
programmed to take into account the lead robot's behavioural cues and
the follower's prediction of the lead robot's movement, based on the
leader's current speed and direction. Robots that incorporated
behavioural information into their decisions performed much better at
following the leader around corners than others, the researchers found.
"We think that if we can embed these cues in control systems, we can
make following more reliable," Joshi said.
A paper describing the work is published in the August 2008 issue of
IEEE Transactions on Industrial Electronics.
- Science Daily
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