University of Lincoln
Browse

Lifelong exploration of dynamic environments

conference contribution
posted on 2024-02-09, 17:20 authored by Tom Duckett, Tomas Krajnik, Joao Santos, Jaime Pulido Fentanes
<p>We propose a novel spatio-temporal mobile-robot exploration method for dynamic, human-populated environments.In contrast to other exploration methods that model the environment as being static, our spatio-temporal exploration method creates and maintains a world model that not only represents the environment's structure, but also its dynamics over time. Consideration of the world dynamics adds an extra, temporal dimension to the explored space and makes the exploration task a never-ending data-gathering process to keep the robot's environment model up-to-date. Thus, the crucial question is not only where, but also when to observe the explored environment. We address the problem by application of information-theoretic exploration to world representations that model the environment states' uncertainties as probabilistic functions of time. The predictive ability of the spatio-temporal model allows the exploration method to decide not only where, but also when to make environment observations.To verify the proposed approach, an evaluation of several exploration strategies and spatio-temporal models was carried out using real-world data gathered over several months. The evaluation indicates that through understanding of the environment dynamics, the proposed spatio-temporal exploration method could predict which locations were going to change at a specific time and use this knowledge to guide the robot. Such an ability is crucial for long-term deployment of mobile robots in human-populated spaces that change over time.</p>

History

School affiliated with

  • School of Computer Science (Research Outputs)

Publisher

IEEE

Date Submitted

2015-07-23

Date Accepted

2015-05-26

Date of First Publication

2015-05-26

Date of Final Publication

2015-05-26

Event Name

IEEE International Conference on Robotics and Automation (ICRA)

Event Dates

26-30 May 2015

Date Document First Uploaded

2015-07-21

ePrints ID

17951

Usage metrics

    University of Lincoln (Research Outputs)

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC