Multi-agent exploration of indoor environments under limited communication constraints

This thesis considers cooperation strategies for teams of agents autonomously exploring an unknown indoor environment under limited communication constraints. The primary application considered is Urban Search-and-Rescue, although other applications are possible, such as surveying hazardous areas. W...

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Main Author: Spirin, Victor
Other Authors: Cameron, Stephen
Published: University of Oxford 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.724939
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-7249392019-03-05T15:49:32ZMulti-agent exploration of indoor environments under limited communication constraintsSpirin, VictorCameron, Stephen2016This thesis considers cooperation strategies for teams of agents autonomously exploring an unknown indoor environment under limited communication constraints. The primary application considered is Urban Search-and-Rescue, although other applications are possible, such as surveying hazardous areas. We focus on developing cooperation strategies that enable periodic communication between the exploring agents and the base station (human operators). Such strategies involve an inherent trade-off between allocating team resources towards facilitating communication and increasing the speed of exploration. We propose two classes of approaches to address this problem: using opportunistic rendezvous to guide the team behaviour, and explicitly arranging rendezvous between agents. In the opportunistic approach, the allocation of team resources between exploration and communication can be indicated with a single numerical parameter between 0 and 1 -- the return ratio -- which leads to complex emergent cooperative behaviour. We show that in some operating environments agents can benefit from explicitly arranging rendezvous. We propose a novel definition of a rendezvous location as a tuple of points and show how such locations can be generated so that the topology of the environment and the communication ranges of agents can be exploited. We show how such rendezvous locations can be used to both improve the speed of exploration and to improve team connectivity by allowing relays to contribute to the overall exploration. We evaluate these approaches extensively in simulation and discuss their applicability in search-and-rescue scenarios.658.4University of Oxfordhttps://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.724939https://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:b337a9a7-91c7-451c-b32f-b1cd05ef983dElectronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 658.4
spellingShingle 658.4
Spirin, Victor
Multi-agent exploration of indoor environments under limited communication constraints
description This thesis considers cooperation strategies for teams of agents autonomously exploring an unknown indoor environment under limited communication constraints. The primary application considered is Urban Search-and-Rescue, although other applications are possible, such as surveying hazardous areas. We focus on developing cooperation strategies that enable periodic communication between the exploring agents and the base station (human operators). Such strategies involve an inherent trade-off between allocating team resources towards facilitating communication and increasing the speed of exploration. We propose two classes of approaches to address this problem: using opportunistic rendezvous to guide the team behaviour, and explicitly arranging rendezvous between agents. In the opportunistic approach, the allocation of team resources between exploration and communication can be indicated with a single numerical parameter between 0 and 1 -- the return ratio -- which leads to complex emergent cooperative behaviour. We show that in some operating environments agents can benefit from explicitly arranging rendezvous. We propose a novel definition of a rendezvous location as a tuple of points and show how such locations can be generated so that the topology of the environment and the communication ranges of agents can be exploited. We show how such rendezvous locations can be used to both improve the speed of exploration and to improve team connectivity by allowing relays to contribute to the overall exploration. We evaluate these approaches extensively in simulation and discuss their applicability in search-and-rescue scenarios.
author2 Cameron, Stephen
author_facet Cameron, Stephen
Spirin, Victor
author Spirin, Victor
author_sort Spirin, Victor
title Multi-agent exploration of indoor environments under limited communication constraints
title_short Multi-agent exploration of indoor environments under limited communication constraints
title_full Multi-agent exploration of indoor environments under limited communication constraints
title_fullStr Multi-agent exploration of indoor environments under limited communication constraints
title_full_unstemmed Multi-agent exploration of indoor environments under limited communication constraints
title_sort multi-agent exploration of indoor environments under limited communication constraints
publisher University of Oxford
publishDate 2016
url https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.724939
work_keys_str_mv AT spirinvictor multiagentexplorationofindoorenvironmentsunderlimitedcommunicationconstraints
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