The Real-World Navigator - Robotics Institute Carnegie Mellon University

The Real-World Navigator

Marko Balabanovic, Craig Becker, Sarah Morse, and Illah Nourbakhsh
Conference Paper, Proceedings of AIAA/NASA Conference on Intelligent Robots for Field, Factory, Service, and Space (CIRFFSS '94), Vol. 1, pp. 223 - 232, March, 1994

Abstract

The success of every mobile robot application hinges on the ability to navigate robustly in the real world. The problem of robust navigation is separable from the challenges faced by any particular robot application. We offer the Real-World Navigator as a solution architecture that includes a path planner, a map-based localizer, and a motion control loop that combines reactive avoidance modules with deliberate goal-based motion. Our architecture achieves a high degree of reliability by maintaining and reasoning about an explicit description of positional uncertainty. We provide two implementations of real-world robot systems that incorporate the Real-World Navigator. The Vagabond Project culminated in a robot that successfully navigated a portion of the Stanford University campus. The Scimmer project developed successful entries for the AAAI 1993 Robotics Competition, placing first in one of the two contests entered.

BibTeX

@conference{Balabanovic-1994-16000,
author = {Marko Balabanovic and Craig Becker and Sarah Morse and Illah Nourbakhsh},
title = {The Real-World Navigator},
booktitle = {Proceedings of AIAA/NASA Conference on Intelligent Robots for Field, Factory, Service, and Space (CIRFFSS '94)},
year = {1994},
month = {March},
volume = {1},
pages = {223 - 232},
}