Becoming Increasingly Reactive - Robotics Institute Carnegie Mellon University

Becoming Increasingly Reactive

Conference Paper, Proceedings of 8th National Conference on Artificial Intelligence (AAAI '90), pp. 1051 - 1058, July, 1990

Abstract

We describe a robot control architecture which combines a stimulus-response subsystem for rapid reaction, with a search-based planner for handling unanticipated situations. The robot agent continually chooses which action it is to perform, using the stimulus-response subsystem when possible, and falling back on the planning subsystem when necessary. Whenever it is forced to plan, it applies an explanation-based learning mechanism to formulate a new stimulus-response rule to cover this new situation and others similar to it. With experience, the agent becomes increasingly reactive as its learning component acquires new stimulus-response rules that eliminate the need for planning in similar subsequent situations. This Theo-Agent architecture is described, and results are presented demonstrating its ability to reduce routine reaction time for a simple mobile robot from minutes to under a second.

BibTeX

@conference{Mitchell-1990-13146,
author = {Tom Mitchell},
title = {Becoming Increasingly Reactive},
booktitle = {Proceedings of 8th National Conference on Artificial Intelligence (AAAI '90)},
year = {1990},
month = {July},
pages = {1051 - 1058},
}