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Adaptive Autonomous Robot TEAMS for Situational Awareness

Adaptive Autonomous Robot TEAMS for Situational Awareness. Co-PI: Ron Arkin Senior Personnel: Tucker Balch, Robert Burridge Research Associates Keith O’Hara, Patrick Ulam, Alan Wagner. PI: Vijay Kumar Senior Personnel: Camillo Jose Taylor, Jim Ostrowski Research Associates

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Adaptive Autonomous Robot TEAMS for Situational Awareness

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  1. Adaptive Autonomous Robot TEAMS for Situational Awareness • Co-PI: Ron Arkin • Senior Personnel: • Tucker Balch, Robert Burridge • Research Associates • Keith O’Hara, Patrick Ulam, Alan Wagner PI: Vijay Kumar Senior Personnel: Camillo Jose Taylor, Jim Ostrowski Research Associates James Keller, John Spletzer, Aveek Das, Guilherme Pereira, Luiz Chaimowicz, Jong-Woo Kim, Anthony Cowley • GRASP Laboratory • University of Pennsylvania Mobile Robotics Laboratory Georgia Institute of Technology Co-PI: Gaurav Sukhatme Senior Personnel: Maja Mataric, Andrew Howard, Ashley Tews Research Associates: Srikanth Saripalli, Boyoon Jung, Brian Gerkey, Helen Yan Co-PI: Jason Redi Senior Personnel: Josh Bers, Keith Manning Robotics Research Laboratory University of Southern California BBN Technologies

  2. The Future Combat System (FCS) concept revolves around the creation of a network-centric force of heterogeneous platforms that is strategically responsive, lethal, survivable and sustainable communication in active mobile nodes during network-centric warfare; integration of multiple, heterogeneous views of the target area Future Combat Systems

  3. Key FCS Considerations • Adapt tovariations in communication performance and strive to maximize suitably defined network-centric measures for perception, control and communication • Provide situational awareness for remotely-located war fighters in a wide range of conditions • Integrate heterogeneous air-ground assets in support of continuous operations over varying terrain

  4. Context • Communication Network • 400 MHz (100Kbs), 2.4 GHz (10Mbs), 38 GHz (100 Mbs) • Affected by foliage, buildings, terrain features, indoor/outdoor • Directionality • Small Team of Heterogeneous Robots • UGVs with vision, range finders • UAVs (blimp, helicopter)

  5. GOALS • A comprehensive model and framework integrating communications, perception, and execution • Automated acquisition of perceptual information for situational awareness • Reactive group behaviors for a team of air and ground based robots that are communications sensitive • A new framework for mobile networking in which robots use sensory information and relative position information to adapt network topology to the constraints of the task.

  6. Control, Vision Behaviors, Architecture • GRASP Laboratory • University of Pennsylvania MARS TEAMS Mobile Robotics Laboratory Georgia Institute of Technology Sensing, Mapping Comms, Networking Robotics Research Laboratory University of Southern California BBN Technologies

  7. Thrusts • Ad Hoc Networks for Control, Perception and Communication • Software framework for distributed computation, sensing, control, and human-robot interface • Communications-sensitive operations • Network-centric approach to situational awareness • Mission-specific planning and control for a team of heterogeneous robots • Adaptation of behaviors and networks to changing conditions

  8. Thrusts and Tasks

  9. Communication Network (R, EC ) • Computational Network (R, H) 1. Ad Hoc Networks for Control, Perception and Communication • Physical Network (R, ES ) eij={i, j, bm, bv, dm, dv} qi= {sm, sv }

  10. Models of Communication • Modeling • Effect of foliage • Buildings • Dependence on frequency, directionality • Statistical models of delays and “hot spots” from experimental data • Neighbors, path costs (delays, power) • Time of last communication • QoS metrics • Control/perception tasks • Individual robots vs. end-to-end • Move to improve reliability and network performance • Interface between network and robot software

  11. Self-Awareness and Cooperative Localization (Penn) • Discovery – robots can organize themselves into a team • Localization – establish relative pose information R1 R1 R2 R2 R3 R3 R5 R5 R4 R4

  12. Self-Awareness and Cooperative Localization • Network of UGVs and Surrogate UAV • Reactive controllers that maintain, exploit network

  13. Cooperative Control (Penn) • Reactive controllers that maintain and exploit network • Controllers and estimators are represented by graphs • Fundamental connection between graph structure and performance (stability, convergence)

  14. 2. Software framework for distributed computation, sensing, control, and human-robot interface • Player/Stage (USC) • Robots • Sensors • Sonar • IR • Scanning LRF, cameras (color blob detection) • Integration

  15. 2. Software framework for distributed computation, sensing, control, and human-robot interface (continued) • ROCI (Penn) • Discover other processes • Communicate with other processes • Monitor other processes • Control other processes

  16. 3. Communications-sensitive behaviors and operations • Networking • Models (BBN) • Diagnostics (BBN) • Control of Mobility • Behaviors (GT) • Verification and Analysis (Penn) • Operations (Thrust 5) • Mission specification (GT) • Mission Planning (GT)

  17. 4. Network-centric approach to situational awareness • Cooperative Localization • Vision (Penn) • Range sensors, GPS, and IMU (USC) • Unreliable communication • Acquisition of 3-D information (Penn) • Cooperative behaviors • (USC, Penn) • Cooperative • Mapping (USC) • Semantic Markup • of Maps (USC)

  18. 5. Mission-specific planning and control for a team of heterogeneous robots • FCS scenarios (BBN, GT) • MissionLab integration (GT)

  19. 6. Adaptation of behaviors and networks to changing conditions • Adaptation of control modes (Penn) • Reinforcement learning to adapt mode switching (sequential composition of behaviors) (USC, Penn) • Path referenced perception and selection of behaviors (USC) • Variable autonomy (USC) • Operation under stealth (USC)

  20. Air Ground Coordination Command and Control Vehicle Software Mission planning Control for communications Active perception Infrastructure for distributed computing Technology Integration

  21. GT Personnel Faculty Prof. Ron Arkin Prof. Tucker Balch Dr. Robert Burridge GRAs Keith O’Hara Patrick Ulam Alan Wagner Mobile Intelligence Inc. Dr. Doug MacKenzie Georgia Institute of Techology

  22. Impact - GT • Provide communication-sensitive planning and behavioral control algorithms in support of network-centric warfare, that employ valid communications models provided by BBN • Provide an integrated mission specification system (MissionLab) spanning heterogeneous teams of UAVs and UGVs • Demonstrate warfighter-oriented tools in three contexts: simulation, laboratory robots, and in the field

  23. Task 1: Communication-sensitive Mission Specification • MissionLab is a usability-tested Mission-specification software developed under extensive DARPA funding (RTPC / UGV Demo II / TMR / UGCV / MARS / FCS-C programs) • Adapt to incorporate air-ground communication-sensitive command and control mechanisms • Extend to support physical and simulated experiments for objective air and ground platforms • Incorporate new communication tasks and triggers

  24. Task 2: Communication Sensitive Planning • Add support for terrain models and other communications relevant topographic features to MissionLab • Use plans-as-resources as a basis for multiagent robotic communication control (spatial, behavioral, formations, etc.) and integrate within MissionLab

  25. Task 3: Communication-Sensitive Team Behaviors • Generation and testing of a new set of reactive communications preserving and recovery behaviors • Creation of behaviors sensitive to QoS • Expansion of Behaviors in support of line-of-sight and subterranean operations

  26. Task 4: Communication Models and Fidelity • Work with BBN to incorporate suitable communication models into MissionLab in support of both simulation and field tests

  27. Task 5: Technology Integration • Conduct Early-on Demonstrations on Ground Robots at Georgia Tech • Provide our Hummer Command and Control Vehicle for Team support at Objective Demonstration • Currently being used for FCS-C Program • Fully actuated – capable of teleautonomous control

  28. University of Southern California • Faculty: • Prof. Gaurav Sukhatme • Prof. Maja Mataric • Research Associates: • Dr. Andrew Howard • Dr. Ashley Tews • Graduate Students: • Srikanth Saripalli, Boyoon Jung, Brian Gerkey, Helen Yan

  29. Outdoor simulation Cooperative outdoor localization Semantic representations Stealthy behaviors Path-referenced perception HRI Integration USC Task Summary

  30. Task 1: Stage Simulation • Current • Multi-robot 2D simulation, models differential and omni-drive robots, sonar, IR, scanning LRF, cameras (color blob detection), pan-tilt-zoom heads, and simple 2 DOF grippers • Language independent, architecture neutral • Extensions • 3D simulation for outdoor terrain. • Incorporate USC helicopter and UPenn blimp

  31. Task 2: Cooperative Outdoor Localization • Extend existing localization algorithms to outdoor environments. • Implement outdoor localization in the presence of partial GPS. • Validate through outdoor experiments with small teams (4 ground robots).

  32. Task 3: Semantic Representation and Activity Recognition • Semantic mark-up of maps with following attributes: • elevation, terrain type and traversability, foliage and coverage type, and impact on communications. • Integrate activity/motion detection algorithms to locate people in the environment. • Demonstrate semantic markup using ground robots at USC.

  33. Task 4: Variable Autonomy and Stealth • Develop and implement behaviors for variable autonomy incorporating operator feedback using gestures • Develop and implement a new “stealthy patrolling” behavior by integrating visibility constraints into current patrolling algorithms • Adapt and tune above behaviors using reinforcement learning to improve performance

  34. Task 5: Path-referenced Perception and Behaviors • Develop path-referenced perception and behaviors, which allow recall of behavioral strategy relative to priors paths taken in the mission • Integrate path-referencing which allows robots to query each other for relative locations of semantic mark-ups

  35. Task 6: Human Robot Interface • Extend Stage to serve as a simple visual display for war fighter. Overlay visual information with laser information in Stage. • Provide simple auditory feedback to the operator about current behavioral state of robots.

  36. Technology Integration • Demonstrations at USC of cooperative localization (laser based with IMU and GPS) using ground robots and USC helicopter. • Demonstration at USC of activity detection, semantic markup of terrain and stealthy traverses. • Support joint demonstration with ground robots.

  37. Faculty Vijay Kumar Camillo Jose Taylor Jim Ostrowski Research Associates James Keller Luiz Chaimowicz Students John Spletzer, Aveek Das Guilherme Pereira Jong-Woo Kim Vito Sabella University of Pennsylvania

  38. Task 1: Model of Ad Hoc Network • Develop a comprehensive model for control, perception and communication for situational awareness • Integrate models of interference, bandwidth, latency and QoS of the communication network with models of control, sensing and communication. • Performance measure • Implications for mobility F (R, H) ÑF (R, H)

  39. Task 2: Control Of Mobility • 1. Design controllers and behaviors in support for communications, establishing or sustaining links • 2. Design controllers and behaviors in support for situational awareness • 3. Formal analysis of controllers and behaviors to predict team performance

  40. Task 3: Adaptation • Performance functions for the ad hoc network and adaptation using reinforcement learning • Reconfiguration of network to enable integration and fusion of sensory data in support of human interaction and situational awareness

  41. Task 4: Human Robot Team Interface • Synthesis and integration for perception enabling multiple views at different spatio-temporal resolution • Interface for human-robot interaction • ROCI • Macroscope

  42. Task 5: Performance Metrics: Verification and Validation • 1. Metrics for control, communication, and perception technologies, and performance measures for system performance. • Existing measures do not incorporate the dependence of control, communication and perception • 2. Designing and conducting experiments to measure performance

  43. Task 6: Technology Integration • Coordinated motion of four UGVs and one blimp optimizing end-to-end network performance • Team control, realization of situational awareness using ROCI.

  44. Penn GRASP Integrated model for control, perception and communication for situational awareness Synthesis and integration for perception enabling multiple views at different spatio-temporal resolution Georgia Tech MRL Communication-sensitive planning and behavioral control algorithms in support of network-centric warfare Integrated mission specification system (MissionLab) spanning heterogeneous teams of UAVs and UGVs Summary of Tasks USC RRL • Cooperative outdoor localization for small teams of robots • Semantic mark-up of maps with environmental attributes and recognition of activity. • Behaviors for path-referenced perception and for clandestine operations BBN • Models of QoS and metrics of performance for network-centric warfare • Interface design between network and robot modules • Formulation of FCS needs, capabilities, and design of demonstrations

  45. MARS TEAMS Impact • New paradigm and novel algorithms for network-centric operations • Mobile nodes that reconfigure to maintain and enhance connectivity • Air-Ground coordination will directly impact FCS capabilities

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