TY - GEN
T1 - WiP abstract
T2 - 2012 IEEE/ACM 3rd International Conference on Cyber-Physical Systems, ICCPS 2012
AU - Chwa, Hoon Sung
AU - Shyshkalov, Andrii
AU - Lee, Jinkyu
AU - Back, Hyoungbu
AU - Lee, Kilho
PY - 2012
Y1 - 2012
N2 - In this paper, we consider multiple robot display formation such that when users give a sequence of images as input, a large number of robots construct a sequence of formations to visualize the input images collectively. Users perceive a higher quality of responsiveness when robots respond to users' input in a more prompt and/or regular manner. A key problem in multiple robot display is trajectory planning, which determines the robot's position and velocity along a given path while avoiding collisions. The response then consists of trajectory planning computation time and robot moving time. In the multiple robot display, there is a conflict between reducing computation time and reducing robot moving time, and it is complicated to predict such a tradeoff over various environments. We propose an adaptive framework that exploits this tradeoff by dynamically adjusting a specific parameter - how many robots are under investigation one by one in sequence for collision resolution. Our simulation results show that or framework effectively reduces the response time in a scalable manner, and it produces balanced solutions adapting to various environments. Our experiment results also show that our framework is valid with real robot settings.
AB - In this paper, we consider multiple robot display formation such that when users give a sequence of images as input, a large number of robots construct a sequence of formations to visualize the input images collectively. Users perceive a higher quality of responsiveness when robots respond to users' input in a more prompt and/or regular manner. A key problem in multiple robot display is trajectory planning, which determines the robot's position and velocity along a given path while avoiding collisions. The response then consists of trajectory planning computation time and robot moving time. In the multiple robot display, there is a conflict between reducing computation time and reducing robot moving time, and it is complicated to predict such a tradeoff over various environments. We propose an adaptive framework that exploits this tradeoff by dynamically adjusting a specific parameter - how many robots are under investigation one by one in sequence for collision resolution. Our simulation results show that or framework effectively reduces the response time in a scalable manner, and it produces balanced solutions adapting to various environments. Our experiment results also show that our framework is valid with real robot settings.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84861499893&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1109/ICCPS.2012.36
DO - 10.1109/ICCPS.2012.36
M3 - Conference contribution
AN - SCOPUS:84861499893
SN - 9780769546957
T3 - Proceedings - 2012 IEEE/ACM 3rd International Conference on Cyber-Physical Systems, ICCPS 2012
SP - 213
BT - Proceedings - 2012 IEEE/ACM 3rd International Conference on Cyber-Physical Systems, ICCPS 2012
Y2 - 17 April 2012 through 19 April 2012
ER -