Abstract
In this paper, we present a distributed information-gathering algorithm for multi-robot systems that use multiple path-based sensors to infer the locations of hazards within the environment. Path-based sensors output binary observations, reporting whether or not an event (like robot destruction) has occurred somewhere along a path, but without the ability to discern where along a path an event has occurred. Prior work has shown that path-based sensors can be used for search and rescue in hazardous communication-denied environments—sending robots into the environment one-at-a-time. We extend this idea to enable multiple robots to search the environment simultaneously. The search space contains targets (human survivors) amidst hazards that can destroy robots (triggering a path-based hazard sensor). We consider a case where communication from the unknown field is prohibited due to communication loss, jamming, or stealth. The search effort is distributed among multiple robots using an entropy-weighted Voronoi partitioning of the environment, such that during each search round all regions have approximately equal information entropy. In each round, every robot is assigned a region in which its search path is calculated. Numerical Monte Carlo simulations are used to compare this idea to other ways of using path-based sensors on multiple robots. The experiments show that dividing search effort using entropy-weighted Voronoi partitioning outperforms the other methods in terms of the information gathered and computational cost.
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Acknowledgments
This study was conducted at the Motion and Teaming Laboratory, University of Maryland (UMD), and was funded by the Maryland Robotics Center (MRC) and the Office of Naval Research (ONR). Alkesh K. Srivastava and George P. Kontoudis were partially supported by the MRC to conduct this research with “Pathway to the Ph.D.” and “MRC Postdoctoral Fellowship” programs, respectively. This work has been possible with the support of ONR under the grant “Experimentally Verified Autonomous Path Planning for Information Gathering in Lethally Hostile Environments with Severely Limited Communication” (N0001420WX01827). The views, positions, and conclusions contained in this document are solely those of the authors and do not explicitly represent those of ONR.
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Srivastava, A.K., Kontoudis, G.P., Sofge, D., Otte, M. (2024). Distributed Multi-robot Information Gathering Using Path-Based Sensors in Entropy-Weighted Voronoi Regions. In: Bourgeois, J., et al. Distributed Autonomous Robotic Systems. DARS 2022. Springer Proceedings in Advanced Robotics, vol 28. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-51497-5_21
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