Gaussian Control Barrier Functions : A Non-Parametric Paradigm to Safety
Inspired by the success of control barrier functions (CBFs) in addressing safety, and the rise of data-driven techniques for modeling functions, we propose a non-parametric approach for online synthesis of CBFs using Gaussian Processes (GPs). Mathematical constructs such as CBFs have achieved safety...
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Zusammenfassung: | Inspired by the success of control barrier functions (CBFs) in addressing
safety, and the rise of data-driven techniques for modeling functions, we
propose a non-parametric approach for online synthesis of CBFs using Gaussian
Processes (GPs). Mathematical constructs such as CBFs have achieved safety by
designing a candidate function a priori. However, designing such a candidate
function can be challenging. A practical example of such a setting would be to
design a CBF in a disaster recovery scenario where safe and navigable regions
need to be determined. The decision boundary for safety in such an example is
unknown and cannot be designed a priori. In our approach, we work with safety
samples or observations to construct the CBF online by assuming a flexible GP
prior on these samples, and term our formulation as a Gaussian CBF. GPs have
favorable properties, in addition to being non-parametric, such as analytical
tractability and robust uncertainty estimation. This allows realizing the
posterior components with high safety guarantees by incorporating variance
estimation, while also computing associated partial derivatives in closed-form
to achieve safe control. Moreover, the synthesized safety function from our
approach allows changing the corresponding safe set arbitrarily based on the
data, thus allowing non-convex safe sets. We validate our approach
experimentally on a quadrotor by demonstrating safe control for fixed but
arbitrary safe sets and collision avoidance where the safe set is constructed
online. Finally, we juxtapose Gaussian CBFs with regular CBFs in the presence
of noisy states to highlight its flexibility and robustness to noise. The
experiment video can be seen at: https://youtu.be/HX6uokvCiGk. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2203.15474 |