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Embedded visual behaviors for navigation
Authors:Jos Santos-Victor  Giulio Sandini
Affiliation:

a Instituto Superior Técnico, Instituto de Sistemas e Robótica, Av. Rovisco Pais, 1, 1096, Lisboa Codex, Portugal

b DIST, Lira-Lab, University of Genova, Via Opera Pia, 13, 16145, Genova, Italy

Abstract:The implementation of a set of visually based behaviors for navigation is presented. The approach, which has been inspired by insect's behaviors, is aimed at building a “library” of embedded visually guided behaviors coping with the most common situations encountered during navigation in an indoor environment. Following this approach, the main goal is no longer how to characterize the environment, but how to embed in each behavior the perceptual processes necessary to understand the aspects of the environment required to generate a purposeful motor output.

The approach relies on the purposive definition of the task to be solved by each of the behaviors and it is based on the possibility of computing visual information during the action. All the implemented behaviors share the same input process (partial information of the image flow field) and the same control variables (heading direction and velocity) to demonstrate both the generality of the approach as well as its efficient use of the computational resources. The controlled mobile base is supposed to move on a flat surface but virtually no calibration is required of the intrinsic and extrinsic parameters of the two cameras and no attempt is made at building a 2D or 3D map of the environment: the only output of the perceptual processes is a motor command.

The first behavior, the centering reflex allows a robot to be easily controlled to navigate along corridors or following walls of a given scene structure. The second behavior extends the system capabilities to the detection of obstacles lying on the pavement in front of the mobile robot. Finally docking behaviors to control the robot to a given position in the environment, with controlled speed and orientation, are presented.

Besides the long-term goal of building a completely autonomous system, these behaviors can have very short-term applications in the area of semi-autonomous systems by taking care of the continuous, tedious control required during routine navigation.

Keywords:Mobile robots  Visual navigation  Robotic behaviors  Motion analysis  Optical flow  Normal flow
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