We investigate how a shepherd should move in order to effectively herd and guide a flock of agents towards a target. Using a detailed agent-based model (ABM) for the members of the flock, we pose and solve an optimization problem for the shepherd that has to simultaneously work to keep the flock cohesive while coercing it towards a prescribed project. We find that three distinct strategies emerge as potential solutions as a function of just two parameters: the ratio of herd size to shepherd repulsion length and the ratio of herd speed to shepherd speed. We term these as: (i) mustering, in which the shepherd circles the herd to ensure compactness, (ii) droving, in which the shepherd chases the herd in a desired direction, and (iii) driving, ...
In this paper, we study how a self-organized mobile robot flock can be steered toward a desired dire...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from the Royal Society via th...
We examine the role that randomness or noise in individual motion may play in forming effective graz...
Herding of sheep by dogs is a powerful example of one individual causing many unwilling individuals ...
Herding of sheep by dogs is a powerful example of one individual causing many unwilling individuals ...
Robotic shepherding is a bio-inspired approach to autonomously guiding a swarm of agents towards a d...
Herding of sheep by dogs is a powerful example of one individual causing many unwilling individuals ...
In this paper, we consider the swarm-control problem of spatially separating a specified target agen...
In flocking, a large number of individuals move cohesively in a common direction. Many examples can ...
Shepherding, the task of guiding a herd of autonomous individuals in a desired direction, is an esse...
This paper presents a distributed coordination methodology for multi-robot systems, based on nearest...
Shepherding problem asks how the movement of an agent (e.g., predator, policeman, or sheepdog) can p...
SummaryFlocking is a striking example of collective behaviour that is found in insect swarms, fish s...
Coordinated movement in animal groups (flocks, schools, herds, etc.) is a classic and well-studied f...
Recent research in animal behaviour has contributed to determine how alignment, turning responses, a...
In this paper, we study how a self-organized mobile robot flock can be steered toward a desired dire...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from the Royal Society via th...
We examine the role that randomness or noise in individual motion may play in forming effective graz...
Herding of sheep by dogs is a powerful example of one individual causing many unwilling individuals ...
Herding of sheep by dogs is a powerful example of one individual causing many unwilling individuals ...
Robotic shepherding is a bio-inspired approach to autonomously guiding a swarm of agents towards a d...
Herding of sheep by dogs is a powerful example of one individual causing many unwilling individuals ...
In this paper, we consider the swarm-control problem of spatially separating a specified target agen...
In flocking, a large number of individuals move cohesively in a common direction. Many examples can ...
Shepherding, the task of guiding a herd of autonomous individuals in a desired direction, is an esse...
This paper presents a distributed coordination methodology for multi-robot systems, based on nearest...
Shepherding problem asks how the movement of an agent (e.g., predator, policeman, or sheepdog) can p...
SummaryFlocking is a striking example of collective behaviour that is found in insect swarms, fish s...
Coordinated movement in animal groups (flocks, schools, herds, etc.) is a classic and well-studied f...
Recent research in animal behaviour has contributed to determine how alignment, turning responses, a...
In this paper, we study how a self-organized mobile robot flock can be steered toward a desired dire...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from the Royal Society via th...
We examine the role that randomness or noise in individual motion may play in forming effective graz...