Mobile Robot Control and Autonomy Through Collaborative Simulation Twin
Tahir, Nazish, Parasuraman, Ramviyas
–arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence
When a mobile robot lacks high onboard computing or networking capabilities, it can rely on remote computing architecture for its control and autonomy. This paper introduces a novel collaborative Simulation Twin (ST) strategy for control and autonomy on resource-constrained robots. The practical implementation of such a strategy entails a mobile robot system divided into a cyber (simulated) and physical (real) space separated over a communication channel where the physical robot resides on the site of operation guided by a simulated autonomous agent from a remote location maintained over a network. Building on top of the digital twin concept, our collaborative twin is capable of autonomous navigation through an advanced SLAM-based path planning algorithm, while the physical robot is capable of tracking the Simulated twin's velocity and communicating feedback generated through interaction with its environment. We proposed a prioritized path planning application to the test in a collaborative teleoperation system of a physical robot guided by ST's autonomous navigation. We examine the performance of a physical robot led by autonomous navigation from the Collaborative Twin and assisted by a predicted force received from the physical robot. The experimental findings indicate the practicality of the proposed simulation-physical twinning approach and provide computational and network performance improvements compared to typical remote computing (or offloading), and digital twin approaches.
arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence
Mar-10-2023
- Country:
- Asia
- Europe > Russia
- Volga Federal District > Udmurtia > Izhevsk (0.04)
- North America > United States
- Georgia > Clarke County > Athens (0.14)
- Genre:
- Research Report (0.82)
- Industry:
- Information Technology (0.46)
- Technology: