Trust-Aware Behavior Reflection for Robot Swarm Self-Healing - Robotics Institute Carnegie Mellon University

Trust-Aware Behavior Reflection for Robot Swarm Self-Healing

Master's Thesis, Tech. Report, CMU-RI-TR-21-41, Robotics Institute, Carnegie Mellon University, August, 2021

Abstract

The deployment of robot swarms is influenced by real-world factors, such as motor issues, sensor failure, and wind disturbances. These factors cause the appearance of faulty robots. In a decentralized swarm, sharing incorrect information from faulty robots will lead to undesired swarm behaviors, such as swarm disconnection and incorrect heading directions. We envision a system where a human operator is exerting supervisory control over a remote swarm by indicating changes in trust to the swarm via a ” trust signal”. By correcting faulty behaviors, trust between the human and the swarm is maintained to facilitate human-swarm cooperation. In this research, a trust-aware behavior reflection method –Trust-R–is designed based on a weighted mean subsequence reduced algorithm(WMSR). By using Trust-R, detected faulty behaviors are automatically corrected by the swarm in a decentralized fashion by referring to the motion status of their trusted neighbors and isolating failed robots from the others. Based on real-world scenarios, three types of robot faults – degraded performance caused by motor wear, abnormal motion caused by system uncertainty, and motion deviation caused by an external disturbance such as wind – were simulated to test the effectiveness of Trust-R. Results show that Trust-R is effective in correcting swarm behaviors for swarm self-healing.

BibTeX

@mastersthesis{Jia-2021-129137,
author = {Fan Jia},
title = {Trust-Aware Behavior Reflection for Robot Swarm Self-Healing},
year = {2021},
month = {August},
school = {Carnegie Mellon University},
address = {Pittsburgh, PA},
number = {CMU-RI-TR-21-41},
}