| Literature DB >> 33265468 |
Daniel-Ioan Curiac1, Ovidiu Banias1, Constantin Volosencu1, Christian-Daniel Curiac2.
Abstract
Living organisms have developed and optimized ingenious defense strategies based on positional entropy. One of the most significant examples in this respect is known as protean behavior, where a prey animal under threat performs unpredictable zig-zag movements in order to confuse, delay or escape the predator. This kind of defensive behavior can inspire efficient strategies for patrolling robots evolving in the presence of adversaries. The main goal of our proposed bioinspired method is to implement the protean behavior by altering the reference path of the robot with sudden and erratic direction changes without endangering the robot's overall mission. By this, a foe intending to target and destroy the mobile robot from a distance has less time for acquiring and retaining the proper sight alignment. The method uses the chaotic dynamics of the 2D Arnold's cat map as a primary source of positional entropy and transfers this feature to every reference path segment using the kinematic relative motion concept. The effectiveness of this novel biologically inspired method is validated through extensive and realistic simulation case studies.Entities:
Keywords: Arnold’s cat map; adversarial patrolling; chaotic dynamics; mobile robot; positional entropy; protean behavior
Year: 2018 PMID: 33265468 PMCID: PMC7512897 DOI: 10.3390/e20050378
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Entropy (Basel) ISSN: 1099-4300 Impact factor: 2.524
Figure 1Arnold’s cat map.
Figure 2Obtaining the compound motion.
Figure 3The compound motion inside the fixed coordinate systems for different values of v.
Figure 4Adapting the motion to a general segment P+1.
Figure 5Adapting the path to P1 segment.
Figure 6Selecting a suitable value for .
Figure 7Altered path and reference path.
Figure 8The path in danger and safety zones.
Figure 9Three laps of the path.
Figure 10MAE metric for different values of .
Figure 11Impact of the obstacles.
Figure 12Impact of FTOs above robot’s path.
Figure 13Impact of the obstacles on the path.