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JRM Vol.14 No.2 pp. 177-185
doi: 10.20965/jrm.2002.p0177
(2002)

Paper:

Motion Generation for a Modular Robot

Eiichi Yoshida*, Satoshi Murata**, Akiya Kamimura*, Kohji Tomita*, Haruhisa Kurokawa*, and Shigeru Kokaji*

*Distributed System Design Research Group, Intelligent Systems Institute, National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology (AIST), 1-2-1 Namiki, Tsukuba-shi, Ibaraki 305-8564, Japan

**Department of Computational Intelligence and Systems Science, Interdisciplinary Graduate School of Science and Engineering, Tokyo Institute of Technology, 4259 Nagatsuta-cho, Midori-ku, Yokohama, Kanagawa 226-8502 Japan

Received:
November 23, 2001
Accepted:
January 8, 2002
Published:
April 20, 2002
Keywords:
modular robotic system, self reconfiguration, motion planning
Abstract
We discuss motion generation of a homogeneous modular robot called a Modular Transformer (M-TRAN). Modules are designed to be self-reconfigurable so a collection of modules can transform itself into a robotic structure. The motion generation of the self-reconfigurable robot presents a computationally difficult problem due to the many combinatorial possibilities for the module configuration, even though the module itself is simple, with 2 degrees of freedom. We describe a motion generation for a class of multimodule structures based on a motion planner and a motion scheduler. The motion planner has 2 layers, with a global planner to plan overall movement of the cluster and a local planner to determine locally coordinated module motions, called motion schemes. After motion is generated as a sequence of single motion schemes, the motion scheduler processes the output plan to allow parallel motions to improve efficiency. The effectiveness of the motion generator is verified through a multiple-module simulation.
Cite this article as:
E. Yoshida, S. Murata, A. Kamimura, K. Tomita, H. Kurokawa, and S. Kokaji, “Motion Generation for a Modular Robot,” J. Robot. Mechatron., Vol.14 No.2, pp. 177-185, 2002.
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Last updated on Apr. 18, 2024