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Nature Inspired Robot Swarm Cooperative Retrieval

Abstract
In nature bees and leaf-cutter ants communicate to improve cooperation during food retrieval. This research aims to model communication in a swarm of autonomous robots. When food is identified robot communication is emitted within a limited range. Other robots within the range receive the communication and learn of the location and size of the food source. The simulation revealed that communication improved the rate of cooperative food retrieval tasks. However a counter-productive chain reaction can occur when robots repeat communications from other robots causing cooperation errors. This can lean to a large number of robots travelling towards the same food source at the same time. The food becomes depleted, before some robots have arrived. Several robots continue to communicate food presence, before arriving at the food source to find it gone. Nature-inspired communication can enhance swarm behaviour without requiring a central controller and may be useful in autonomous drones, vehicles or robotics.


Figure 1: (a) Finite state machine behaviour control (b) Screenshot of simulated swarm communication (c) Graph of node connections between robots

Download source code and windows .exe executable here

Swarm Communication Robot Simulation YouTube Video



3D Robot Simulation YouTube Video



Dr. Neil Vaughan PhD, BSc (Hons), MIET
Post-doctoral researcher, Bournemouth University (BU)
Faculty of Science & Technology (Formerly School of Design Engineering and Computing)
SMART Technology Research Center
Computational Intelligence research group, Biomedical Engineering research group
Poole House 3rd Floor - P256
Talbot Campus, Fern Barrow, Poole, BH12 5BB
Landline: +44 (0)12029 65038
mobile: 07783527327
email: nvaughan@bmth.ac.uk