Planning Strategies for the Ambler Walking Robot
Abstract
A hierarchy of planning strategies is proposed and explained for a walking robot called the Ambler. The hierarchy decomposes planning into levels of trajectory, gait, and footfall. An abstraction of feasible traversability allows the Ambler's trajectory planner to identify acceptable trajectories by finding paths that guarantee footfalls without specifying exactly which footfalls. Leg and body moves that achieve this trajectory can be generated by the Ambler's gait planner, which incorporates pattern constraints and measures of utility to search for the best next move. By combining constraints from the quality and details of the terrain, the Ambler's footfall planner can select footfalls that insure stability and remain within the tolerances of the gait.
BibTeX
@conference{Wettergreen-1990-13141,author = {David Wettergreen and H. Thomas and Chuck Thorpe},
title = {Planning Strategies for the Ambler Walking Robot},
booktitle = {Proceedings of IEEE International Conference on Systems Engineering},
year = {1990},
month = {August},
pages = {198 - 203},
}