Abstract
Multi-Robot Systems and Swarms are intelligent systems in which a large number of agents are coordinated in a distributed and decentralized way. Each robot may have homogeneous or heterogeneous capabilities and can be programmed with several fundamental control laws adapting to the environment. Through different kinds of relationships built using the communication protocols, they present various behaviors based on the shared information and current state. To adapt to dynamic environments effectively, and maximize the utility of the group, robots need to cooperate, share their local information, and make a suitable plan according to the specific scenario. In this paper, we formalize the problem of multi-robots fulfilling dynamic tasks using state transitions represented through a Behavior Tree. We design a framework with corresponding distributed algorithms for communications between robots and negotiation and agreement protocols through a novel priority mechanism. Finally, we evaluate our framework through simulation experiments.
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@conference{Yang2019, title = {Self-Reactive Planning of Multi-Robots with Dynamic Task Assignments}, author = {Qin Yang and Zhiwei Luo and Wenzhan Song and Ramviyas Parasuraman}, year = {2019}, date = {2019-08-22}, booktitle = {Int. Symp. on Multi Robot Systems (MRS)}, organization = {Rutgers, NJ, USA}, abstract = {Multi-Robot Systems and Swarms are intelligent systems in which a large number of agents are coordinated in a distributed and decentralized way. Each robot may have homogeneous or heterogeneous capabilities and can be programmed with several fundamental control laws adapting to the environment. Through different kinds of relationships built using the communication protocols, they present various behaviors based on the shared information and current state. To adapt to dynamic environments effectively, and maximize the utility of the group, robots need to cooperate, share their local information, and make a suitable plan according to the specific scenario. In this paper, we formalize the problem of multi-robots fulfilling dynamic tasks using state transitions represented through a Behavior Tree. We design a framework with corresponding distributed algorithms for communications between robots and negotiation and agreement protocols through a novel priority mechanism. Finally, we evaluate our framework through simulation experiments.}, keywords = {cooperation, multi-robot systems, planning}, pubstate = {published}, tppubtype = {conference} }