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Scalable sWarms of Autonomous Robots and
Mobile Sensors (SWARMS) project.
The SWARMS project brings together experts in artificial intelligence,
control theory, robotics, systems engineering and biology with the
goal of understanding swarming behaviors in nature and applications
of biologically-inspired models of swarm behaviors to large networked
groups of autonomous vehicles. Our main goal is to develop a framework
and methodology for the analysis of swarming behavior in biology
and the synthesis of bio-inspired swarming behavior for engineered
systems. We will be interested in such questions as: Can large numbers
of autonomously functioning vehicles be reliably deployed in the
form of a “swarm” to carry out a prescribed mission
and to respond as a group to high-level management commands? Can
such a group successfully function in a potentially hostile environment,
without a designated leader, with limited communications between
its members, and/or with different and potentially dynamically changing
“roles” for its members? What can we learn about how
to organize these teams from biological groupings such as insect
swarms, bird flocks, and fish schools? Is there a hierarchy of “compatible”
models appropriate to swarming/schooling/flocking which is rich
enough to explain these behaviors at various “resolutions”
ranging from aggregate characterizations of emergent behavior to
detailed descriptions which model individual vehicle dynamics?
Vijay Kumar
University of Pennsylvania
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