Consensus algorithms are fundamental for distributed decision-making in robotics. However, these algorithms usually assume the ability to communicate without considering the possibility of a malicious or malfunctioning robot that may communicate false or incorrect in- formation. The literature proposes methods that mitigate the effect of these non-cooperative robots and ensure convergence of the consensus, but require the graph of the communication network to satisfy a property known as r-robustness. Verifying the r-robustness of a given graph has been shown to be an coNP-complete problem, and the methods to construct graphs satisfying a desired r-robustness are limited. Furthermore, achieving formations of robots satisfying this graph-theo...
We discuss the fundamental problems and practical issues underlying the deployment of a swarm of aut...
Presented at ROBOCOMM 2007, 1st International Conference on Robot Communication and Coordination, At...
In this paper we describe a consensus based control strategy to obtain a formation of groups of mobi...
Consensus algorithms are fundamental for distributed decision-making in robotics. However, these alg...
Consensus algorithms are fundamental for distributed decision-making in robotics. However, these alg...
This paper addresses the topological robustness of robot networks under failures; a subject often ne...
This paper studies connectivity maintenance of robotic networks that communicate at discrete times a...
Applications based on groups of self-organized mobile robots and - more generically - agents are bec...
A number of techniques that allow autonomous multi-robot systems to be held within formation-like st...
In this article, we study the dynamic resilient containment control problem for continuous-time mult...
We describe how a set of mobile robots can arrange themselves on any specified curve on the plane in...
Operations in unpredictable environments require coordinating teams of robots. This coordination imp...
Applications based on groups of self-organized mobile robots are becoming pervasive in communication...
Abstract In this paper we present a collection of graph-based methods for determining if a team of m...
For many distributed autonomous robotic systems, it is important to maintain communication connectiv...
We discuss the fundamental problems and practical issues underlying the deployment of a swarm of aut...
Presented at ROBOCOMM 2007, 1st International Conference on Robot Communication and Coordination, At...
In this paper we describe a consensus based control strategy to obtain a formation of groups of mobi...
Consensus algorithms are fundamental for distributed decision-making in robotics. However, these alg...
Consensus algorithms are fundamental for distributed decision-making in robotics. However, these alg...
This paper addresses the topological robustness of robot networks under failures; a subject often ne...
This paper studies connectivity maintenance of robotic networks that communicate at discrete times a...
Applications based on groups of self-organized mobile robots and - more generically - agents are bec...
A number of techniques that allow autonomous multi-robot systems to be held within formation-like st...
In this article, we study the dynamic resilient containment control problem for continuous-time mult...
We describe how a set of mobile robots can arrange themselves on any specified curve on the plane in...
Operations in unpredictable environments require coordinating teams of robots. This coordination imp...
Applications based on groups of self-organized mobile robots are becoming pervasive in communication...
Abstract In this paper we present a collection of graph-based methods for determining if a team of m...
For many distributed autonomous robotic systems, it is important to maintain communication connectiv...
We discuss the fundamental problems and practical issues underlying the deployment of a swarm of aut...
Presented at ROBOCOMM 2007, 1st International Conference on Robot Communication and Coordination, At...
In this paper we describe a consensus based control strategy to obtain a formation of groups of mobi...