With whom to communicate

Learning efficient communication for multi-robot collision avoidance

Conference Paper (2020)
Authors

A. Serra-Gómez (TU Delft - Learning & Autonomous Control)

Bruno Ferreira de Brito (TU Delft - Learning & Autonomous Control)

H. Zhu (TU Delft - Learning & Autonomous Control)

Jen Jen Chung (ETH Zürich)

J. Alonso-Mora (TU Delft - Learning & Autonomous Control)

Research Group
Learning & Autonomous Control
Copyright
© 2020 A. Serra Gomez, B.F. Ferreira de Brito, H. Zhu, Jen Jen Chung, J. Alonso-Mora
To reference this document use:
https://doi.org/10.1109/IROS45743.2020.9341762
More Info
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Publication Year
2020
Language
English
Copyright
© 2020 A. Serra Gomez, B.F. Ferreira de Brito, H. Zhu, Jen Jen Chung, J. Alonso-Mora
Research Group
Learning & Autonomous Control
Pages (from-to)
11770-11776
ISBN (electronic)
978-1-7281-6212-6
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.1109/IROS45743.2020.9341762
Reuse Rights

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Abstract

Decentralized multi-robot systems typically perform coordinated motion planning by constantly broadcasting their intentions as a means to cope with the lack of a central system coordinating the efforts of all robots. Especially in complex dynamic environments, the coordination boost allowed by communication is critical to avoid collisions between cooperating robots. However, the risk of collision between a pair of robots fluctuates through their motion and communication is not always needed. Additionally, constant communication makes much of the still valuable information shared in previous time steps redundant. This paper presents an efficient communication method that solves the problem of "when"and with "whom"to communicate in multi-robot collision avoidance scenarios. In this approach, every robot learns to reason about other robots' states and considers the risk of future collisions before asking for the trajectory plans of other robots. We evaluate and verify the proposed communication strategy in simulation with four quadrotors and compare it with three baseline strategies: non-communicating, broadcasting and a distance-based method broadcasting information with quadrotors within a predefined distance.

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