In the field of collective robotics much research has been devoted to the study of coordinated and cooperative behaviours where typically all the robots play the same function. Much less attention has been devoted to the development of groups of robots that play different roles (robot teams), probably because evolutionary collective robotics tend to use groups of homogeneous robots, in which role differentiation poses difficult challenges. In the few Evolutionary robotics studies in which role differentiation has been demonstrated such differentiation depends exclusively on the robots physical interactions, making the solutions found by evolution quite fragile, in particular with respect to the number of robots that form the group. In this paper we apply a method for role differentiation developed in previous work to the evolution of teams of homogeneous robots in which role differentiation is based on a dedicated communication channel. Our evolved robots are able to negotiate their role through communication and perform very effectively their collaborative task, which requires that one robot is sent to a 'mission' away from the group while all other robots remain in a 'home'. Our simulations also show that the method proposed, based on the rewarding of communication-based role differentiation, is necessary for the evolution of the desired behaviour. Finally, we show that since role differentiation is based on communication and not only on robot physical interactions, evolved solutions are considerably robust with respect to the number of robots composing the group.

Evolution of Communication-Based Collaborative Behavior in Homogeneous RobotsArtificial Life 14: Proceedings of the Fourteenth International Conference on the Synthesis and Simulation of Living Systems / Gigliotta, Onofrio; Marco, Mirolli. - (2014), pp. 673-680. [10.7551/978-0-262-32621-6-ch107]

Evolution of Communication-Based Collaborative Behavior in Homogeneous RobotsArtificial Life 14: Proceedings of the Fourteenth International Conference on the Synthesis and Simulation of Living Systems

GIGLIOTTA, Onofrio;
2014

Abstract

In the field of collective robotics much research has been devoted to the study of coordinated and cooperative behaviours where typically all the robots play the same function. Much less attention has been devoted to the development of groups of robots that play different roles (robot teams), probably because evolutionary collective robotics tend to use groups of homogeneous robots, in which role differentiation poses difficult challenges. In the few Evolutionary robotics studies in which role differentiation has been demonstrated such differentiation depends exclusively on the robots physical interactions, making the solutions found by evolution quite fragile, in particular with respect to the number of robots that form the group. In this paper we apply a method for role differentiation developed in previous work to the evolution of teams of homogeneous robots in which role differentiation is based on a dedicated communication channel. Our evolved robots are able to negotiate their role through communication and perform very effectively their collaborative task, which requires that one robot is sent to a 'mission' away from the group while all other robots remain in a 'home'. Our simulations also show that the method proposed, based on the rewarding of communication-based role differentiation, is necessary for the evolution of the desired behaviour. Finally, we show that since role differentiation is based on communication and not only on robot physical interactions, evolved solutions are considerably robust with respect to the number of robots composing the group.
2014
Evolution of Communication-Based Collaborative Behavior in Homogeneous RobotsArtificial Life 14: Proceedings of the Fourteenth International Conference on the Synthesis and Simulation of Living Systems / Gigliotta, Onofrio; Marco, Mirolli. - (2014), pp. 673-680. [10.7551/978-0-262-32621-6-ch107]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11588/587024
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