4.3 Article

Proprioceptive feedback design for gait synchronization in collective undulatory robots

Journal

ADVANCED ROBOTICS
Volume 36, Issue 13, Pages 654-669

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/01691864.2022.2050810

Keywords

Bio-inspired robotics; collective robotics; synchronization; nonlinear control

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The collective movement of animals has been a valuable inspiration for studying swarm robotics. This paper investigates how robots can synchronize their oscillatory gaits through contact interactions without the need for communication. The study presents a proprioceptive feedback control system that allows for collective gait phase synchronization, and demonstrates its effectiveness through experiments and simulations.
The collective movement of animals has long been a source of inspiration for multi-agent swarm robotics. One of the fundamental goals for swarm robotics study is to understand how effective and robust collective behaviors can emerge from simple interaction principles. When animal or robot collectives are in high-density configurations the ability for visual or auditory sensing is diminished and the opportunities for interacting through mechanical contact are enhanced. In this paper, we study how robots that move through lateral body undulation in close proximity are capable of synchronizing their oscillatory gaits through contact interactions between adjacent robots. Critically, gait phase synchronization occurs without the requirement for robot-robot communication, and instead can be engineered as an emergent property of the robot control system. We present a proprioceptive feedback control system that generates collective gait phase synchronization of undulatory robots in experiment and simulation. We first validate this control system using a simple one-dimensional toy model to demonstrate how proprioceptive feedback governs phase synchronization. Simulations and experiments with undulatory three-link robots further demonstrate how phase synchronization can be controlled. Lastly, we demonstrate that robot pairs moving in a confined tunnel can synchronize their movements which leads to faster group locomotion through confined spaces.

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