Information Theoretic Multi-Target Localization with Robot Swarms
Philip Dames, Vijay Kumar

Citation
Philip Dames, Vijay Kumar. "Information Theoretic Multi-Target Localization with Robot Swarms". Talk or presentation, 5, November, 2013; Poster presented at the 2013 TerraSwarm Annual Meeting.

Abstract
This work addresses the task of searching for an unknown number of targets within a known obstacle map using a team of mobile robots equipped with noisy, limited field-of-view sensors. Such sensors may fail to detect a subset of the visible targets or return false positive detections. These measurement sets are used to localize the target set using the Probability Hypothesis Density, or PHD, filter. Robots communicate with each other on a local peer-to-peer basis and with a server or the cloud via access points, exchanging measurements to update their belief about the target set and poses to plan future actions. The server provides a mechanism to collect and synthesize information from all robots and to share the global, albeit time-delayed, belief state to robots near access points. We design a decentralized control scheme for the robots that exploits this architecture, the robot-to-robot and robot-to-server communication links, and the PHD representation of the belief state. Specifically, robots move in such a way as to maximize mutual information between the target set and measurements, both self-collected and those available by accessing the server, balancing local exploration with sharing knowledge across the team, using a finite state machine to switch between these actions. Furthermore, robots coordinate their actions with other robots exploring the same local region of the environment.

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Citation formats  
  • HTML
    Philip Dames, Vijay Kumar. <a
    href="http://www.terraswarm.org/pubs/163.html"><i>Information
    Theoretic Multi-Target Localization with Robot
    Swarms</i></a>, Talk or presentation,  5,
    November, 2013; Poster presented at the <a
    href="http://www.terraswarm.org/conferences/13/annual"
    >2013 TerraSwarm Annual Meeting</a>.
  • Plain text
    Philip Dames, Vijay Kumar. "Information Theoretic
    Multi-Target Localization with Robot Swarms". Talk or
    presentation,  5, November, 2013; Poster presented at the
    <a
    href="http://www.terraswarm.org/conferences/13/annual"
    >2013 TerraSwarm Annual Meeting</a>.
  • BibTeX
    @presentation{DamesKumar13_InformationTheoreticMultiTargetLocalizationWithRobot,
        author = {Philip Dames and Vijay Kumar},
        title = {Information Theoretic Multi-Target Localization
                  with Robot Swarms},
        day = {5},
        month = {November},
        year = {2013},
        note = {Poster presented at the <a
                  href="http://www.terraswarm.org/conferences/13/annual"
                  >2013 TerraSwarm Annual Meeting</a>.},
        abstract = {This work addresses the task of searching for an
                  unknown number of targets within a known obstacle
                  map using a team of mobile robots equipped with
                  noisy, limited field-of-view sensors. Such sensors
                  may fail to detect a subset of the visible targets
                  or return false positive detections. These
                  measurement sets are used to localize the target
                  set using the Probability Hypothesis Density, or
                  PHD, filter. Robots communicate with each other on
                  a local peer-to-peer basis and with a server or
                  the cloud via access points, exchanging
                  measurements to update their belief about the
                  target set and poses to plan future actions. The
                  server provides a mechanism to collect and
                  synthesize information from all robots and to
                  share the global, albeit time-delayed, belief
                  state to robots near access points. We design a
                  decentralized control scheme for the robots that
                  exploits this architecture, the robot-to-robot and
                  robot-to-server communication links, and the PHD
                  representation of the belief state. Specifically,
                  robots move in such a way as to maximize mutual
                  information between the target set and
                  measurements, both self-collected and those
                  available by accessing the server, balancing local
                  exploration with sharing knowledge across the
                  team, using a finite state machine to switch
                  between these actions. Furthermore, robots
                  coordinate their actions with other robots
                  exploring the same local region of the environment.},
        URL = {http://terraswarm.org/pubs/163.html}
    }
    

Posted by Philip Dames on 3 Nov 2013.

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