4.7 Article

Robotic Hierarchical Graph Neurons. A novel implementation of HGN for swarm robotic behaviour control

Journal

EXPERT SYSTEMS WITH APPLICATIONS
Volume 186, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.eswa.2021.115675

Keywords

Distorted pattern recognition; Robotic behaviour; Swarm robotics; Hierarchical Graph Neurons

Funding

  1. Cyber and Electronic Warfare Division, Defence Science and Technology Group, Commonwealth of Australia

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The research introduces a novel form of Hierarchical Graph Neurons (HGN) for behaviour selection in robotic swarms, providing the ability to predict environments and select appropriate behaviours, resulting in improved task flexibility for robots.
Simple rule-based robot behaviours, such as those utilised for swarming robots, typically excel in only the niche conditions for which they were designed. Behaviour selection allows robots to switch between these specialised behaviours in accordance with the observed conditions. This paper explores the use of a novel form of Hierarchical Graph Neurons (HGN) for such behaviour selection within a swarm of robotic agents. This new HGN is called Robotic-HGN (R-HGN) as it allows pattern matching of mixed datasets of robot observations. R-HGN matches said patterns to labelled environments and allows appropriate robot behaviours to be utilised throughout an operation in a 'society of mind' approach to task flexibility in robots. This approach is novel to the HGN field as it expands the application beyond discrete categorical data inputs. Additionally, this research is novel to the field of robotic swarming as it explores a new method to temporal agent diversity for overcoming localised environment challenges. This R-HGN for behaviour selection is validated against individual behaviour implementations and a random behaviour selection. The comparison is made via statistical distribution of swarm fitnesses in multiple instances of a non-trivial swarming task. From this comparison R-HGN is found to enable appropriate behaviour selection in both environments known and unknown a priori, resulting in a median swarm performance improvement of up to 389%. Finally, in environments prior observed, the R-HGN environment prediction one-versus-all accuracy is up to 99.1% and F1 scores reach a maximum of 97.15%.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available