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Anthills Built to Order: Automating Construction with Artificial Swarms

dc.date.accessioned2006-08-14T12:49:01Z
dc.date.accessioned2018-11-24T10:25:00Z
dc.date.available2006-08-14T12:49:01Z
dc.date.available2018-11-24T10:25:00Z
dc.date.issued2006-05-12
dc.identifier.citationPh.D. thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/33791
dc.identifier.urihttp://repository.aust.edu.ng/xmlui/handle/1721.1/33791
dc.descriptionPhD thesis
dc.description.abstractSocial insects build large, complex structures, which emerge through the collective actions of many simple agents acting with no centralized control or preplanning. These natural systems motivate investigating the use of artificial swarms to automate construction or fabrication. The goal is to be able to take an unspecified number of simple robots and a supply of building material, give the system a high-level specification for any arbitrary structure desired, and have a guarantee that it will produce that structure without further intervention.In this thesis I describe such a distributed system for automating construction, in which autonomous mobile robots collectively build user-specified structures from square building blocks. The approach preserves many desirable features of the natural systems, such as considerable parallelism and robustness to factorslike robot loss and variable order or timing of actions. Further, unlike insect colonies, it can build particular desired structures according to a high-level design provided by the user.Robots in this system act without explicit communication or cooperation, instead using the partially completed structure to coordinate their actions. This mechanism is analogous to that of stigmergy used by social insects, in which insects take actions that affect the environment, and the environmental state influences further actions. I introduce a framework of "extended stigmergy" in which building blocks are allowed to store, process or communicate information. Increasing the capabilities of the building material (rather than of the robots) in this way increases the availability of nonlocal structure information. Benefits include significant improvements in construction speed and in ability to take advantage of the parallelism of the swarm.This dissertation describes system design and control rules for decentralized teams of robots that provably build arbitrary solid structures in two dimensions. I present a hardware prototype, and discuss extensions to more general structures, including those built with multiple block types and in three dimensions.
dc.format.extent116 p.
dc.format.extent3106746 bytes
dc.format.extent130023424 bytes
dc.language.isoen_US
dc.titleAnthills Built to Order: Automating Construction with Artificial Swarms


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