abstract: Robotic technology is advancing to the point where it will soon be feasible to deploy massive populations, or swarms, of low-cost autonomous robots to collectively perform tasks over large domains and time scales. Many of these tasks will require the robots to allocate themselves around the boundaries of regions or features of interest and achieve target objectives that derive from their resulting spatial configurations, such as forming a connected communication network or acquiring sensor data around the entire boundary. We refer to this spatial allocation problem as boundary coverage. Possible swarm tasks that will involve boundary coverage include cooperative load manipulation for applications in construction, manufacturing,...
We consider boundary coverage of a regular structure by a swarm of miniature robots, and compare a s...
Robot swarms herald the ability to solve complex tasks using a large collection of simple devices. H...
This paper unifies and extends several different existing strategies for deploying groups of robots ...
abstract: Swarms of low-cost, autonomous robots can potentially be used to collectively perform task...
We provide a comparison of a series of original coordination mechanisms for the distributed boundary...
abstract: This thesis considers two problems in the control of robotic swarms. Firstly, it addresses...
Tasks that require parallelism, redundancy, and adaptation to dynamic, possibly hazardous environmen...
We study distributed boundary coverage of known environments using a team of minia-ture robots. Dist...
We study distributed boundary coverage of known environments using a team of minia-ture robots. Dist...
Coverage control constitutes a canonical multi-robot coordination strategy that allows a collection ...
We present a scalable approach to dynamically allocating a swarm of homogeneous robots to multiple t...
Robot swarms herald the ability to solve complex tasks using a large collection of simple devices. H...
Tasks that require parallelism, redundancy, and adaptation to dynamic, possibly hazardous environmen...
We study distributed boundary coverage of known environments using a team of miniature robots. Distr...
Coverage is widely known in the field of sensor networks as the task of deploying sensors to complet...
We consider boundary coverage of a regular structure by a swarm of miniature robots, and compare a s...
Robot swarms herald the ability to solve complex tasks using a large collection of simple devices. H...
This paper unifies and extends several different existing strategies for deploying groups of robots ...
abstract: Swarms of low-cost, autonomous robots can potentially be used to collectively perform task...
We provide a comparison of a series of original coordination mechanisms for the distributed boundary...
abstract: This thesis considers two problems in the control of robotic swarms. Firstly, it addresses...
Tasks that require parallelism, redundancy, and adaptation to dynamic, possibly hazardous environmen...
We study distributed boundary coverage of known environments using a team of minia-ture robots. Dist...
We study distributed boundary coverage of known environments using a team of minia-ture robots. Dist...
Coverage control constitutes a canonical multi-robot coordination strategy that allows a collection ...
We present a scalable approach to dynamically allocating a swarm of homogeneous robots to multiple t...
Robot swarms herald the ability to solve complex tasks using a large collection of simple devices. H...
Tasks that require parallelism, redundancy, and adaptation to dynamic, possibly hazardous environmen...
We study distributed boundary coverage of known environments using a team of miniature robots. Distr...
Coverage is widely known in the field of sensor networks as the task of deploying sensors to complet...
We consider boundary coverage of a regular structure by a swarm of miniature robots, and compare a s...
Robot swarms herald the ability to solve complex tasks using a large collection of simple devices. H...
This paper unifies and extends several different existing strategies for deploying groups of robots ...