Intelligent mobility controllers for a robotic vehicle climbing obstacles autonomously

Date
2008
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Abstract
Research in mobile robot navigation has demonstrated some success in navigating a flat world while avoiding obstacles. However, algorithms which analyze complex environments in order to climb obstacles have had very little success due to the complexity of the task. This thesis aims to design a controller for a mobile robot to autonomously climb obstacles by adapting its geometric configuration. Three control algorithms are proposed to solve the autonomous locomotion problem for climbing obstacles. A reactive controller evaluates the appropriate geometric configuration based on terrain and vehicle geometric considerations. As a scripted controller is difficult to design for every possible circumstance, learning algorithms are a plausible alternative. A neural network based controller works if a task resembles a learned case. However, it lacks adaptability. Learning in real-time by reinforcement and progress estimation facilitates robot control and navigation. This thesis presents the reinforcement learning algorithm developed to find alternative solutions when the reactive controller gets stuck while climbing an obstacle. The controllers are validated and compared with simulations.
Description
Bibliography: p. 81-86
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Citation
Vincent, I. (2008). Intelligent mobility controllers for a robotic vehicle climbing obstacles autonomously (Master's thesis, University of Calgary, Calgary, Canada). Retrieved from https://prism.ucalgary.ca. doi:10.11575/PRISM/2218
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