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 coverage performance


Optimizing Start Locations in Ergodic Search for Disaster Response

Rao, Ananya, Hargis, Alyssa, Wettergreen, David, Choset, Howie

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

In disaster response scenarios, deploying robotic teams effectively is crucial for improving situational awareness and enhancing search and rescue operations. The use of robots in search and rescue has been studied but the question of where to start robot deployments has not been addressed. This work addresses the problem of optimally selecting starting locations for robots with heterogeneous capabilities by formulating a joint optimization problem. To determine start locations, this work adds a constraint to the ergodic optimization framework whose minimum assigns robots to start locations. This becomes a little more challenging when the robots are heterogeneous (equipped with different sensing and motion modalities) because not all robots start at the same location, and a more complex adaptation of the aforementioned constraint is applied. Our method assumes access to potential starting locations, which can be obtained from expert knowledge or aerial imagery. We experimentally evaluate the efficacy of our joint optimization approach by comparing it to baseline methods that use fixed starting locations for all robots. Our experimental results show significant gains in coverage performance, with average improvements of 35.98% on synthetic data and 31.91% on real-world data for homogeneous and heterogeneous teams, in terms of the ergodic metric.


Online scalable Gaussian processes with conformal prediction for guaranteed coverage

Xu, Jinwen, Lu, Qin, Giannakis, Georgios B.

arXiv.org Machine Learning

The Gaussian process (GP) is a Bayesian nonparametric paradigm that is widely adopted for uncertainty quantification (UQ) in a number of safety-critical applications, including robotics, healthcare, as well as surveillance. The consistency of the resulting uncertainty values however, hinges on the premise that the learning function conforms to the properties specified by the GP model, such as smoothness, periodicity and more, which may not be satisfied in practice, especially with data arriving on the fly. To combat against such model mis-specification, we propose to wed the GP with the prevailing conformal prediction (CP), a distribution-free post-processing framework that produces it prediction sets with a provably valid coverage under the sole assumption of data exchangeability. However, this assumption is usually violated in the online setting, where a prediction set is sought before revealing the true label. To ensure long-term coverage guarantee, we will adaptively set the key threshold parameter based on the feedback whether the true label falls inside the prediction set. Numerical results demonstrate the merits of the online GP-CP approach relative to existing alternatives in the long-term coverage performance.


Pipe Routing with Topology Control for UAV Networks

Devaraju, Shreyas, Garg, Shivam, Ihler, Alexander, Kumar, Sunil

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Routing protocols help in transmitting the sensed data from UAVs monitoring the targets (called target UAVs) to the BS. However, the highly dynamic nature of an autonomous, decentralized UAV network leads to frequent route breaks or traffic disruptions. Traditional routing schemes cannot quickly adapt to dynamic UAV networks and/or incur large control overhead and delays. To establish stable, high-quality routes from target UAVs to the BS, we design a hybrid reactive routing scheme called pipe routing that is mobility, congestion, and energy-aware. The pipe routing scheme discovers routes on-demand and proactively switches to alternate high-quality routes within a limited region around the active routes (called the pipe) when needed, reducing the number of route breaks and increasing data throughput. We then design a novel topology control-based pipe routing scheme to maintain robust connectivity in the pipe region around the active routes, leading to improved route stability and increased throughput with minimal impact on the coverage performance of the UAV network.


Reinforcement Learning-Based Coverage Path Planning with Implicit Cellular Decomposition

Heydari, Javad, Saha, Olimpiya, Ganapathy, Viswanath

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Coverage path planning in a generic known environment is shown to be NP-hard. When the environment is unknown, it becomes more challenging as the robot is required to rely on its online map information built during coverage for planning its path. A significant research effort focuses on designing heuristic or approximate algorithms that achieve reasonable performance. Such algorithms have sub-optimal performance in terms of covering the area or the cost of coverage, e.g., coverage time or energy consumption. In this paper, we provide a systematic analysis of the coverage problem and formulate it as an optimal stopping time problem, where the trade-off between coverage performance and its cost is explicitly accounted for. Next, we demonstrate that reinforcement learning (RL) techniques can be leveraged to solve the problem computationally. To this end, we provide some technical and practical considerations to facilitate the application of the RL algorithms and improve the efficiency of the solutions. Finally, through experiments in grid world environments and Gazebo simulator, we show that reinforcement learning-based algorithms efficiently cover realistic unknown indoor environments, and outperform the current state of the art.