Defend the practicality of single-integrator models in multi-robot coordination control

Single-integrator models have been widely used to model robot kinematics in multi-robot coordination control problems. However, it is also widely believed that this model is too simple to lead to practically useful control laws. In this paper, we prove that if a gradient-descent distributed control...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inIEEE International Conference on Control and Automation (Print) pp. 666 - 671
Main Authors Shiyu Zhao, Zhiyong Sun
Format Conference Proceeding
LanguageEnglish
Published IEEE 01.07.2017
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ISSN1948-3457
DOI10.1109/ICCA.2017.8003139

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Summary:Single-integrator models have been widely used to model robot kinematics in multi-robot coordination control problems. However, it is also widely believed that this model is too simple to lead to practically useful control laws. In this paper, we prove that if a gradient-descent distributed control law designed for single integrators has been proved to be convergent for a given coordination task, then the control law can be readily modified to adapt for various motion constraints including velocity saturation, obstacle avoidance, and nonholonomic models. This result is valid for a wide range of coordination tasks. It defends the practical usefulness of many existing coordination control laws designed based on single-integrator models and suggests a new methodology to design coordination control laws subject motion constraints.
ISSN:1948-3457
DOI:10.1109/ICCA.2017.8003139