Architectures, Abstractions,
and Algorithms for Large
Teams of Robots
Professor Vijay Kumar
Chair,
Mechanical Engineering and Applied Mechanics
GRASP
Laboratory
University
of Pennsylvania
Networked
robots represent the convergence of robotics, sensor networks and mobile ad-hoc
networks, with many applications and a growing market projected to be $200B in
2013. This talk will focus the fundamental problems and practical issues
underlying the deployment of large numbers of autonomously functioning robots.
The central problem is the so-called inverse problem of deriving
individual robot behaviors for a desired group behavior. There are numerous
examples of group behavior in biology which suggest that analysis of swarming
behaviors in biology may provide insight for the synthesis of collective
behaviors for engineered systems. I will present a methodology for
modeling and analyzing such collective behaviors and discuss architectures,
abstractions and algorithms for the control of large networks of robots.
Friday, September 12, 2008
3:30 – 4:30 p.m.
Rm. 1500 EECS