A Multi‐Agent Control Architecture for a Robotic Wheelchair
Author(s) -
Cipriano Galindo,
Ana CruzMartín,
JoseLuis Blanco,
J. A. Fernńndez-Madrigal,
J. González
Publication year - 2006
Publication title -
applied bionics and biomechanics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.397
H-Index - 23
eISSN - 1754-2103
pISSN - 1176-2322
DOI - 10.1533/abbi.2006.0027
Subject(s) - wheelchair , dependability , robot , human–computer interaction , traverse , architecture , control (management) , computer science , robot control , reinforcement learning , robotics , artificial intelligence , embedded system , mobile robot , engineering , simulation , control engineering , software engineering , art , world wide web , visual arts , geodesy , geography
Assistant robots like robotic wheelchairs can perform an effective and valuable work in our daily lives. However, they eventually may need external help from humans in the robot environment (particularly, the driver in the case of a wheelchair) to accomplish safely and efficiently some tricky tasks for the current technology, i.e. opening a locked door, traversing a crowded area, etc. This article proposes a control architecture for assistant robots designed under a multi-agent perspective that facilitates the participation of humans into the robotic system and improves the overall performance of the robot as well as its dependability. Within our design, agents have their own intentions and beliefs, have different abilities (that include algorithmic behaviours and human skills) and also learn autonomously the most convenient method to carry out their actions through reinforcement learning. The proposed architecture is illustrated with a real assistant robot: a robotic wheelchair that provides mobility to impaired or elderly people
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