We describe how a set of mobile robots can arrange themselves on any specified curve on the plane in the presence of dynamic changes both in the underlying ad hoc network and in the set of participating robots. Our strategy is for the mobile robots to implement a self-stabilizing virtual layer consisting of mobile client nodes, stationary Virtual Nodes (VNs), and local broadcast communication. The VNs are associated with predetermined regions in the plane and coordinate among themselves to distribute the client nodes relatively uniformly among the VNs' regions. Each VN directs its local client nodes to align themselves on the local portion of the target curve. The resulting motion coordination protocol is self-stabilizing, in that each robo...
In this paper, the formation control problem for unicycle mobile robots is studied. A virtual struct...
This work is under review in Distributed Computing JournalGathering is a fundamental coordination pr...
Abstract—Mobile robots have successfully solved many real world problems. In the following we presen...
We describe how a set of mobile robots can arrange themselves on any specified curve on the plane in...
We discuss the fundamental problems and practical issues underlying the deployment of a swarm of aut...
Self-stabilization is a versatile technique to withstand any transient fault in a distributed system...
La capacité de coordination et d’ordonnancement des mouvements des éléments mobiles (robots), d’un s...
We describe how a virtual node abstraction layer can be used to coordinate the motion of real mobile...
Abstract — We describe how a virtual node abstraction layer can be used to coordinate the motion of ...
In this study, we focus on a self-deployment problem for a swarm of autonomous mobile robots that ca...
We present here a set of decentralised control laws to facilitate lattice formation and reactive coo...
Operations in unpredictable environments require coordinating teams of robots. This coordination imp...
A first version of this paper have been submitted to Distributed Computing in February 2012 (the ext...
In this paper we address the problem of formation control of a group of robots that exchange informa...
Applications based on groups of self-organized mobile robots and - more generically - agents are bec...
In this paper, the formation control problem for unicycle mobile robots is studied. A virtual struct...
This work is under review in Distributed Computing JournalGathering is a fundamental coordination pr...
Abstract—Mobile robots have successfully solved many real world problems. In the following we presen...
We describe how a set of mobile robots can arrange themselves on any specified curve on the plane in...
We discuss the fundamental problems and practical issues underlying the deployment of a swarm of aut...
Self-stabilization is a versatile technique to withstand any transient fault in a distributed system...
La capacité de coordination et d’ordonnancement des mouvements des éléments mobiles (robots), d’un s...
We describe how a virtual node abstraction layer can be used to coordinate the motion of real mobile...
Abstract — We describe how a virtual node abstraction layer can be used to coordinate the motion of ...
In this study, we focus on a self-deployment problem for a swarm of autonomous mobile robots that ca...
We present here a set of decentralised control laws to facilitate lattice formation and reactive coo...
Operations in unpredictable environments require coordinating teams of robots. This coordination imp...
A first version of this paper have been submitted to Distributed Computing in February 2012 (the ext...
In this paper we address the problem of formation control of a group of robots that exchange informa...
Applications based on groups of self-organized mobile robots and - more generically - agents are bec...
In this paper, the formation control problem for unicycle mobile robots is studied. A virtual struct...
This work is under review in Distributed Computing JournalGathering is a fundamental coordination pr...
Abstract—Mobile robots have successfully solved many real world problems. In the following we presen...