Multi-Agent Autonomy: Advancements and Challenges in Subterranean Exploration
Artificial intelligence has undergone immense growth and maturation in recent years, though autonomous systems have traditionally struggled when fielded in diverse and previously unknown environments. DARPA is seeking to change that with the Subterranean Challenge, by providing roboticists the oppor...
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Zusammenfassung: | Artificial intelligence has undergone immense growth and maturation in recent
years, though autonomous systems have traditionally struggled when fielded in
diverse and previously unknown environments. DARPA is seeking to change that
with the Subterranean Challenge, by providing roboticists the opportunity to
support civilian and military first responders in complex and high-risk
underground scenarios. The subterranean domain presents a handful of
challenges, such as limited communication, diverse topology and terrain, and
degraded sensing. Team MARBLE proposes a solution for autonomous exploration of
unknown subterranean environments in which coordinated agents search for
artifacts of interest. The team presents two navigation algorithms in the form
of a metric-topological graph-based planner and a continuous frontier-based
planner. To facilitate multi-agent coordination, agents share and merge new map
information and candidate goal-points. Agents deploy communication beacons at
different points in the environment, extending the range at which maps and
other information can be shared. Onboard autonomy reduces the load on human
supervisors, allowing agents to detect and localize artifacts and explore
autonomously outside established communication networks. Given the scale,
complexity, and tempo of this challenge, a range of lessons were learned, most
importantly, that frequent and comprehensive field testing in representative
environments is key to rapidly refining system performance. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2110.04390 |