Path Following for Autonomous Vehicle Navigation Based on Kinodynamic Control
Author(s) -
Kristijan Maček,
Roland Philippsen,
Roland Siegwart
Publication year - 2008
Publication title -
journal of computing and information technology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.169
H-Index - 27
eISSN - 1846-3908
pISSN - 1330-1136
DOI - 10.2498/cit.1001171
Subject(s) - computer science , motion planning , path (computing) , collision avoidance , any angle path planning , obstacle avoidance , fast path , collision , mobile robot , robot , obstacle , trajectory , mathematical optimization , control theory (sociology) , control (management) , artificial intelligence , mathematics , computer network , physics , computer security , astronomy , political science , law
This paper addresses the problem of path following for mobile robots with particular emphasis on integrating the global path planning, path following and a collision avoidance scheme in a unified framework. Whereas the traditional path following algorithms aim at minimizing an error function with respect to a given path and kinematic and/or dynamic model of the robot, the problem of collision avoidance is often neglected or simply cast to the replanning phase of the global planner which issues the given path. Such approaches that do not check explicitly for collision for the given state of the ego-robot and the environment can easily lead to hazardous situations, in particular if latencies are present in the global path planning phase. In order to address obstacle avoidance directly, a navigation framework is presented here that combines a path following control scheme to attain a global objective with a collision checking scheme that incrementally builds collision-free trajectories, thus ensuring ego-robot safety at all times, with respect to the partially known static environment obstacles and kinodynamic limitations of the ego-robot itself. Two novel path following schemes are presented, namely the Traversability-Anchored Dynamic Path Following (TADPF) and a combined TADPF-Sliding Mode Path Following (SMPF), based on a previously developed SMPF technique. The two path following schemes have been verified both in simulation and experimentally on a test Ackermann-like vehicle
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