The Robotics Institute
Search the site
RI | Publications | Distributed Robotic Mapping of Extreme Environments

Text only version of this site

Distributed Robotic Mapping of Extreme Environments
S. Thayer, B. Digney, M.B. Dias, A. Stentz, B. Nabbe, and M. Hebert
Proceedings of SPIE: Mobile Robots XV and Telemanipulator and Telepresence Technologies VII, Vol. 4195, November, 2000.

Jump to: Download | Abstract | Notes | Text Reference | BibTeX Reference

Download [Help]

Adobe portable document format (pdf) [2680 KB]

Copyright notice: This material is presented to ensure timely dissemination of scholarly and technical work. Copyright and all rights therein are retained by authors or by other copyright holders. All persons copying this information are expected to adhere to the terms and constraints invoked by each author's copyright. These works may not be reposted without the explicit permission of the copyright holder.

Abstract

In the extreme environments posed by war fighting, fire fighting, and nuclear accident response, the cost of direct human exposure is levied in terms of injury and death. Robotic alternatives must address effective operations while removing humans from danger. This is profoundly challenging, as extreme environments inflict cumulative performance damage on exposed robotic agents. Sensing and perception are among the most vulnerable components. We present a distributed robotic system that enables autonomous reconnaissance and mapping in urban structures using teams of robots. Robot teams scout remote sites, maintain operational tempos, and successfully execute tasks, principally the construction of 3-D Maps, despite multiple agent failures. Using an economic model of agent interaction based on a free market architecture, a virtual platform (a robot colony) is synthesized where task execution does not directly depend on individual agents within the colony.

Notes

Sponsor: DARPA

Associated centers: FRC and VASC
Associated labs/groups: 3D Computer Vision Group and Reliable Autonomous Systems Lab
Associated projects: Cognitive Colonies and Federation of Intelligent Robotic Explorers Project

Text Reference

S. Thayer, B. Digney, M.B. Dias, A. Stentz, B. Nabbe, and M. Hebert, "Distributed Robotic Mapping of Extreme Environments," Proceedings of SPIE: Mobile Robots XV and Telemanipulator and Telepresence Technologies VII, Vol. 4195, November, 2000.

BibTeX Reference

@inproceedings{Thayer_2000_3506,
   author = "Scott Thayer and Bruce Digney and M Bernardine Dias and Anthony (Tony) Stentz and Bart Nabbe and Martial Hebert",
   title = "Distributed Robotic Mapping of Extreme Environments",
   booktitle = "Proceedings of SPIE: Mobile Robots XV and Telemanipulator and Telepresence Technologies VII",
   month = "November",
   year = "2000",
   volume = "4195"
}


The Robotics Institute is part of the School of Computer Science, Carnegie Mellon University.
For updates and comments, please see these instructions.
This page maintained by robotwebmaster@ri.cmu.edu