Bacterium-inspired robots for environmental monitoring
- 1 January 2004
- conference paper
- Published by Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE)
- Vol. 153 (10504729) , 1436-1443 Vol.2
- https://doi.org/10.1109/robot.2004.1308026
Abstract
Locating gradient sources and tracking them over time has important applications to environmental monitoring and studies of the ecosystem. We present an approach, inspired by bacterial chemotaxis, for robots to navigate to sources using gradient measurements and a simple actuation strategy (biasing a random walk). Extensive simulations show the efficacy of the approach in varied conditions including multiple sources, dissipative sources, and noisy sensors and actuators. We also show how such an approach could be used for boundary finding. We validate our approach by testing it on a small robot (the robomote) in a phototaxis experiment. A comparison of our approach with gradient descent shows that while gradient descent is faster, our approach is better suited for boundary coverage, and performs better in the presence of multiple and dissipative sources.Keywords
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