4 Introduction to AI Robotics (MIT Press)Chapter 4: The Reactive Paradigm1 The Reactive Paradigm Describe the Reactive Paradigm in terms of the 3 robot.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Reactive and Potential Field Planners
Advertisements

Lecture 7: Potential Fields and Model Predictive Control
ARCHITECTURES FOR ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE SYSTEMS
Elephants Don’t Play Chess
Signals and Systems March 25, Summary thus far: software engineering Focused on abstraction and modularity in software engineering. Topics: procedures,
5-1 Chapter 5: REACTIVE AND HYBRID ARCHITECTURES.
Lecture 4: Command and Behavior Fusion Gal A. Kaminka Introduction to Robots and Multi-Robot Systems Agents in Physical and Virtual Environments.
Embedded System Lab Kim Jong Hwi Chonbuk National University Introduction to Intelligent Robots.
AuRA: Principles and Practice in Review
5 Introduction to AI Robotics (MIT Press)Chapter 5: Designing a Reactive Implementation1 Designing a Reactive Implementation List the steps involved in.
A Summary of the Article “Intelligence Without Representation” by Rodney A. Brooks (1987) Presented by Dain Finn.
ECE 4340/7340 Exam #2 Review Winter Sensing and Perception CMUcam and image representation (RGB, YUV) Percept; logical sensors Logical redundancy.
Brent Dingle Marco A. Morales Texas A&M University, Spring 2002
Experiences with an Architecture for Intelligent Reactive Agents By R. Peter Bonasso, R. James Firby, Erann Gat, David Kortenkamp, David P Miller, Marc.
IofT 1910 W Fall 2006 Week 3 Plan for today:  discuss questions asked for the writeup  talk about Brooks’ approach and compare it with other approaches.
Behavior Coordination Mechanisms – State-of-the- Art Paper by: Paolo Pirjanian (USC) Presented by: Chris Martin.
Motor Schema - Based Mobile Robot Navigation System - Ronald C. Arkin.
Autonomous Mobile Robots CPE 470/670 Lecture 8 Instructor: Monica Nicolescu.
Motor Schema Based Navigation for a Mobile Robot: An Approach to Programming by Behavior Ronald C. Arkin Reviewed By: Chris Miles.
Topics: Introduction to Robotics CS 491/691(X) Lecture 8 Instructor: Monica Nicolescu.
Topics: Introduction to Robotics CS 491/691(X)
Behavior- Based Approaches Behavior- Based Approaches.
A Robust Layered Control System for a Mobile Robot Rodney A. Brooks Presenter: Michael Vidal.
AuRA: Autonomous Robot Architecture From: Integrating Behavioral, Perceptual, and World Knowledge in Reactive Navigation Ron Arkin, 1990.
On Three-Layer Architecture Erann Gat Jet Propulsion Laboratory California Institute of Technology Presentation by: Ekkasit Tiamkaew Date: 09/09/04.
Statistical Techniques in Robotics
Signals and Systems March 25, Summary thus far: software engineering Focused on abstraction and modularity in software engineering. Topics: procedures,
Mobile Robot Control Architectures “A Robust Layered Control System for a Mobile Robot” -- Brooks 1986 “On Three-Layer Architectures” -- Gat 1998? Presented.
Designing a Reactive Implementation
Introduction to Behavior- Based Robotics Based on the book Behavior- Based Robotics by Ronald C. Arkin.
Artificial Intelligence Chapter 2 Stimulus-Response Agents
Localisation & Navigation
3 Introduction to AI Robotics (MIT Press)Chapter 3: Biological Foundations1 Biological Foundations of the Reactive Paradigm Review Why? -comp. theory IRM.
Reactive Paradigm – Overview Subsumption Architecture By Ian Jonkers Studies in Machine Learning: Intelligent Robotics.
Robotica Lecture 3. 2 Robot Control Robot control is the mean by which the sensing and action of a robot are coordinated The infinitely many possible.
4 Introduction to AI Robotics (MIT Press)Chapter 4: The Reactive Paradigm1 The Reactive Paradigm Describe the Reactive Paradigm in terms of the 3 robot.
Autonomous Mobile Robots CPE 470/670 Lecture 8 Instructor: Monica Nicolescu.
Outline: Biological Metaphor Biological generalization How AI applied this Ramifications for HRI How the resulting AI architecture relates to automation.
7 Introduction to AI Robotics (MIT Press), copyright Robin Murphy 2000 Chapter 7: Hybrid Deliberative/Reactive Paradigm1 Part 1: Overview & Managerial.
Robotica Lecture 3. 2 Robot Control Robot control is the mean by which the sensing and action of a robot are coordinated The infinitely many possible.
University of Amsterdam Search, Navigate, and Actuate - Qualitative Navigation Arnoud Visser 1 Search, Navigate, and Actuate Qualitative Navigation.
Electrical Engineering Design Project - Fall 2002 Electrical/Computer Engineering Design Project Fall 2002 Lecture 4 – Robotics.
University of Windsor School of Computer Science Topics in Artificial Intelligence Fall 2008 Sept 11, 2008.
Behavior Control for Robotic Exploration of Planetary Surfaces Written by Erann Gat, Rajiv Desai, Robert Ivlev, John Loch and David P Miller Presented.
Intelligent Robotics Today: Robot Control Architectures Next Week: Localization Reading: Murphy Sections 2.1, 2.3, 2.5, 3.1, 3.5, 3.6, 4.1 – 4.3, 4.5,
Robotica Lecture Review Reactive control Complete control space Action selection The subsumption architecture –Vertical vs. horizontal decomposition.
Brooks’ Subsumption Architecture EEL 6838 T. Ryan Fitz-Gibbon 1/24/2004.
Introduction to Artificial Intelligence CS 438 Spring 2008 Today –AIMA, Ch. 25 –Robotics Thursday –Robotics continued Home Work due next Tuesday –Ch. 13:
3 Introduction to AI Robotics (MIT Press)Chapter 3: Biological Foundations1 Biological Foundations of the Reactive Paradigm Review Why? -comp. theory IRM.
4 Introduction to AI Robotics (MIT Press)Chapter 4: The Reactive Paradigm1 The Reactive Paradigm Describe the Reactive Paradigm in terms of the 3 robot.
Subsumption Architecture and Nouvelle AI Arpit Maheshwari Nihit Gupta Saransh Gupta Swapnil Srivastava.
Advanced Mobile Robotic The City College of the City University of New York Advanced Mobile Robotic The City College of the City University of New York.
Behavior-based Multirobot Architectures. Why Behavior Based Control for Multi-Robot Teams? Multi-Robot control naturally grew out of single robot control.
Autonomous Mobile Robots CPE 470/670 Lecture 10 Instructor: Monica Nicolescu.
Autonomous Robots Robot Path Planning (3) © Manfred Huber 2008.
Trends in Robotics Research Classical AI Robotics (mid-70’s) Sense-Plan-Act Complex world model and reasoning Reactive Paradigm (mid-80’s) No models: “the.
Robotic Architectures: Schema Lecture 7a. Motor Schemas ● Based upon schema theory: Explains motor behavior in terms of concurrent control of many different.
State Machines Chapter 5.
Build Intelligence from the bottom up!
Build Intelligence from the bottom up!
Trends in Robotics Research
Artificial Intelligence Chapter 2 Stimulus-Response Agents
Build Intelligence from the bottom up!
Chapter 7: Hybrid Deliberative/Reactive Paradigm
Subsuption Architecture
Robot Intelligence Kevin Warwick.
Chapter 4: The Reactive Paradigm
Chapter 12: Building Situated Robots
Behavior Based Systems
Presentation transcript:

4 Introduction to AI Robotics (MIT Press)Chapter 4: The Reactive Paradigm1 The Reactive Paradigm Describe the Reactive Paradigm in terms of the 3 robot primitives and its organization of sensing List the characteristics of a reactive robotic system, and discuss the connotations of surrounding the reactive paradigm Describe the two dominant methods for combining behaviors in a reactive architecture: subsumption and potential field summation Be able to program a behavior using pfields Be able to construct a new potential field from primitive pfields and sum pfields to generate an emergent behavior Review Organization -SA -beh. specific Subsumption -Philosophy -Level 0 -Level 1 -Level 2 Summary

4 Introduction to AI Robotics (MIT Press)Chapter 4: The Reactive Paradigm2 Review: Lessons from Biology Programs should decompose complex actions into behaviors. Complexity emerges from concurrent behaviors acting independently Agents should rely on straightforward activation mechanisms such as IRM Perception filters sensing and considers only what is relevant to the task (action-oriented perception) Behaviors are independent but the output may be used in many ways including: combined with others to produce a resultant output or to inhibit others Review Organization -SA -beh. specific Subsumption -Philosophy -Level 0 -Level 1 -Level 2 Summary

4 Introduction to AI Robotics (MIT Press)Chapter 4: The Reactive Paradigm3 Hierarchical Organization is “Horizontal” Review Organization -SA -beh. specific Subsumption -Philosophy -Level 0 -Level 1 -Level 2 Summary

4 Introduction to AI Robotics (MIT Press)Chapter 4: The Reactive Paradigm4 More Biological is “Vertical” Review Organization -SA -beh. specific Subsumption -Philosophy -Level 0 -Level 1 -Level 2 Summary

4 Introduction to AI Robotics (MIT Press)Chapter 4: The Reactive Paradigm5 Sensing is Behavior-Specific or Local Behaviors can “share” perception without knowing it This is behavioral sensor fusion Review Organization -SA -beh. specific Subsumption -Philosophy -Level 0 -Level 1 -Level 2 Summary

4 Introduction to AI Robotics (MIT Press)Chapter 4: The Reactive Paradigm6 Reactive Robots Most apps are programmed with this paradigm Biologically based: –Behaviors (independent processes), released by perceptual or internal events (state) –No world models or long term memory –Highly modular, generic –Overall behavior emerges SENSEACT RELEASER behavior Overview History Reactive USAR Summary

4 Introduction to AI Robotics (MIT Press)Chapter 4: The Reactive Paradigm7 Example 1: Robomow Behaviors? Random Avoid –Avoid(bump=obstacle) –Avoid(wire=boundary) Stop –Stop(tilt=ON) All active Overview History Reactive USAR Summary

4 Introduction to AI Robotics (MIT Press)Chapter 4: The Reactive Paradigm8 Example 2: My Real Baby Behaviors? Touch-> Awake Upside down & Awake-> Cry Awake & Hungry -> Cry Awake & Lonely -> Cry Note can get crying from multiple behaviors Note internal state (countdown timer on Lonely) Overview History Reactive USAR Summary

4 Introduction to AI Robotics (MIT Press)Chapter 4: The Reactive Paradigm9 Reactive Historically, there are two main styles of creating a reactive system –Subsumption architecture Layers of behavioral competence How to control relationships –Potential fields Concurrent behaviors How to navigate They are equivalent in power In practice, see a mixture of both layers and concurrency

4 Introduction to AI Robotics (MIT Press)Chapter 4: The Reactive Paradigm10 Subsumption: Rodney Brooks From Review Organization -SA -beh. specific Subsumption -Philosophy -Level 0 -Level 1 -Level 2 Summary

4 Introduction to AI Robotics (MIT Press)Chapter 4: The Reactive Paradigm11 Subsumption Philosophy Modules should be grouped into layers of competence Modules in a higher lever can override or subsume behaviors in the next lower level –Suppression: substitute input going to a module –Inhibit: turn off output from a module No internal state in the sense of a local, persistent representation similar to a world model. Architecture should be taskable: accomplished by a higher level turning on/off lower layers Review Organization -SA -beh. specific Subsumption -Philosophy -Level 0 -Level 1 -Level 2 Summary

4 Introduction to AI Robotics (MIT Press)Chapter 4: The Reactive Paradigm12 Level 0: Runaway HALT COLLIDE PS MS RUN AWAY PS MS runaway 0 wander 1 follow-corridor 2 Review Organization -SA -beh. specific Subsumption -Philosophy -Level 0 -Level 1 -Level 2 Summary

4 Introduction to AI Robotics (MIT Press)Chapter 4: The Reactive Paradigm13 Example Perception: Polar Plot Plot is ego-centric Plot is distributed (available to whatever wants to use it) Although it is a representation in the sense of being a data structure, there is no memory (contains latest information) and no reasoning (2-3 means a “wall”) Review Organization -SA -beh. specific Subsumption -Philosophy -Level 0 -Level 1 -Level 2 Summary if sensing is ego-centric, can often eliminate need for memory, representation

4 Introduction to AI Robotics (MIT Press)Chapter 4: The Reactive Paradigm14 Level 1: Wander runaway 0 wander 1 follow-corridor 2 Review Organization -SA -beh. specific Subsumption -Philosophy -Level 0 -Level 1 -Level 2 Summary encoders AVOID PS MS WANDER PSMS Note sharing of Perception, fusion What would Inhibition do?

4 Introduction to AI Robotics (MIT Press)Chapter 4: The Reactive Paradigm15 Class Exercise runaway 0 wander 1 move2light 2 LIGHT PHOTO- TROPHISM S Review Organization -SA -beh. specific Subsumption -Philosophy -Level 0 -Level 1 -Level 2 Summary

4 Introduction to AI Robotics (MIT Press)Chapter 4: The Reactive Paradigm16 Level 2: Follow-Corridors runaway 0 wander 1 follow-corridor 2 STAY-IN-MIDDLE PSMS Review Organization -SA -beh. specific Subsumption -Philosophy -Level 0 -Level 1 -Level 2 Summary

4 Introduction to AI Robotics (MIT Press)Chapter 4: The Reactive Paradigm17 Class Exercise Design the roomba with subsumption

4 Introduction to AI Robotics (MIT Press)Chapter 4: The Reactive Paradigm18 Subsumption Review What is the Reactive Paradigm in terms of primitives? What is the Reactive Paradigm in terms of sensing? Does the Reactive Paradigm solve the Open World problem? How does the Reactive Paradigm eliminate the frame problem? What is the difference between a behavior and a level of competence? What is the difference between suppression and inhibition in subsumption? Review Organization -SA -beh. specific Subsumption -Philosophy -Level 0 -Level 1 -Level 2 Summary

4 Introduction to AI Robotics (MIT Press)Chapter 4: The Reactive Paradigm19 Potential Fields: Ron Arkin From From

4 Introduction to AI Robotics (MIT Press)Chapter 4: The Reactive Paradigm20 Potential Fields Philosophy The motor schema component of a behavior can be expressed with a potential fields methodology –A potential field can be a “primitive” or constructed from primitives which are summed together –The output of behaviors are combined using vector summation From each behavior, the robot “feels” a vector or force –Magnitude = force, strength of stimulus, or velocity –Direction But we visualize the “force” as a field, where every point in space represents the vector that it would feel if it were at that point

4 Introduction to AI Robotics (MIT Press)Chapter 4: The Reactive Paradigm21 Example: Run Away via Repulsion

4 Introduction to AI Robotics (MIT Press)Chapter 4: The Reactive Paradigm22 5 Primitive Potential Fields

4 Introduction to AI Robotics (MIT Press)Chapter 4: The Reactive Paradigm23 Draw These Now! Common fields in behaviors Uniform –Move in a particular direction, corridor following Repulsion –Runaway (obstacle avoidance) Attraction –Move to goal Perpendicular –Corridor following Tangential –Move through door, docking (in combination with other fields) random –do you think this is a potential field? what would it look like?

4 Introduction to AI Robotics (MIT Press)Chapter 4: The Reactive Paradigm24 Class Exercise Name the field you’d use for –Moving towards a light –Avoiding obstacles Attractive Repulsive

4 Introduction to AI Robotics (MIT Press)Chapter 4: The Reactive Paradigm25 Combining Fields for Emergent Behavior obstacle goal If robot were dropped anywhere on this grid, it would want to move to goal and avoid obstacle: Behavior 1: MOVE2GOAL Behavior 2: RUNAWAY The output of each independent behavior is a vector, the 2 vectors is summed to produce emergent behavior obstacle goal

4 Introduction to AI Robotics (MIT Press)Chapter 4: The Reactive Paradigm26 Note: In this example, repulsive field only extends for 2 meters; the robot runs away only if obstacle within 2 meters Note: in this example, robot can sense the goal from 10 meters away Fields and Their Combination

4 Introduction to AI Robotics (MIT Press)Chapter 4: The Reactive Paradigm27 Path Taken If robot started at this location, it would take the following path It would only “feel”the vector for the location, then move accordingly, “feel” the next vector, move, etc. Pfield visualization allows us to see the vectors at all points, but robot never computes the “field of vectors” just the local vector Robot only feels vectors for this point when it (if) reaches that point

4 Introduction to AI Robotics (MIT Press)Chapter 4: The Reactive Paradigm28 Discussion Could you represent the Arctic Tern feeding behavior with potential fields? –what happens with multiple red dots? –can you inhibit with potential fields?

4 Introduction to AI Robotics (MIT Press)Chapter 4: The Reactive Paradigm29 Example: follow-corridor or follow-sidewalk PerpendicularUniform Combined Note use of Magnitude profiles: Perpendicular decreases

4 Introduction to AI Robotics (MIT Press)Chapter 4: The Reactive Paradigm30 Class Exercise: Draw Fields for Wall-Following (assume that robot stands still if no wall) Just half of a follow-corridor, but…

4 Introduction to AI Robotics (MIT Press)Chapter 4: The Reactive Paradigm31 But how does the robot see a wall without reasoning or intermediate representations? Perceptual schema “connects the dots”, returns relative orientation PS: Find-wall MS: Perp. MS: Uniform S Sonars orientation

4 Introduction to AI Robotics (MIT Press)Chapter 4: The Reactive Paradigm32 OK, But why isn’t that a representation of a wall? It’s not really reasoning that it’s a wall, rather it is reacting to the stimulus which happens to be smoothed (common in neighboring neurons)

4 Introduction to AI Robotics (MIT Press)Chapter 4: The Reactive Paradigm33 Level 0: Runaway Note: multiple instances of a behavior vs. 1: Could just have 1 Instance of RUN AWAY, Which picks nearest reading; Doesn’t matter, but this Allows addition of another Sonar without changing the RUN AWAY behavior

4 Introduction to AI Robotics (MIT Press)Chapter 4: The Reactive Paradigm34 Level 1: Wander Wander is Uniform, but Changes direction aperiodically

4 Introduction to AI Robotics (MIT Press)Chapter 4: The Reactive Paradigm35 Level 2: Follow Corridor Follow-corridor Should we Leave Run Away In? Do we Need it?

4 Introduction to AI Robotics (MIT Press)Chapter 4: The Reactive Paradigm36 Pfields Advantages –Easy to visualize –Easy to build up software libraries –Fields can be parameterized –Combination mechanism is fixed, tweaked with gains Disadvantages –Local minima problem (sum to magnitude=0) Box canyon problem –Jerky motion

4 Introduction to AI Robotics (MIT Press)Chapter 4: The Reactive Paradigm37 Example: Docking Behavior Arkin and Murphy, 1990, Questa, Grossmann, Sandini, 1995, Tse and Luo, 1998, Vandorpe, Xu, Van Brussel, Roth, Schilling, 1998, Santos-Victor, Sandini, 1997 Orientation, ratio of pixel counts  tangent vector Total count  attraction vector

4 Introduction to AI Robotics (MIT Press)Chapter 4: The Reactive Paradigm38 Docking Behavior Video

4 Introduction to AI Robotics (MIT Press)Chapter 4: The Reactive Paradigm39 Class Discussion: When Does a Field End? Imagine the case of a “SodaPup” robot (MIT) –task: find and pick up a Coca-Cola can –environment: red cans are only red object in world –behavior: ??

4 Introduction to AI Robotics (MIT Press)Chapter 4: The Reactive Paradigm40 Pfields Summary Reactive Paradigm: SA, sensing is local –Solves the Open World problem by emulating biology –Eliminates the frame problem by not using any global or persistent representation –Perception is direct, ego-centric, and distributed Two architectural styles are: subsumption and pfields Behaviors in pfield methodologies are a tight coupling of sensing to acting; modules are mapped to schemas conceptually Potential fields and subsumption are logically equivalent but different implementations Pfield problems include –local minima (ways around this) –jerky motion –bit of an art