

Talk: Tuesday, February 12, 2002, 3:00-4:00 p.m.
Room 3105
Engineering Building
Host: J. Weng
Abstract: Research
conducted over the last decade within the Mobile Robot Laboratory at Georgia
Tech has centered on many important issues involving multi-robot teams.In
this talk, we broadly review a range of research results: from the role
of communication in multiagent robotic systems; to multiagent mission specification
tools for building complex robot missions using a graphical user interface
validated by usability studies; to formation control for small teams of
robots including results demonstrated on two HMMWVs; to team teleautonomy
where an operator can interface smoothly at varying levels of autonomy
with a large number of robotic agents. These results are currently being
applied within three different ongoing DARPA programs that serve as feeder
programs for the DARPA/Army Future Combat System (FCS) effort.
Biography: Ronald
C. Arkin received his Ph.D. in Computer Science from the University of
Massachusetts, Amherst after which he joined the College of Computing atthe
Georgia Institute of Technology. He holds the rank of Professor and is
the Director of the Mobile Robot Laboratory.Dr.
Arkin's research interests include behavior-based control andaction-oriented
perception for mobile robots and unmanned aerial vehicles,hybrid
deliberative/reactive software architectures, robot survivability, multiagent
robotic systems, biorobotics, human-robot interaction, and learning in
autonomous systems. Prof. Arkin has written a textbook entitled Behavior-based
Robotics and co-edited a book entitled Robot Colonies. Funding sources
have included NSF, DARPA, U.S. Army, Savannah River Technology Center,
Honda, Draper Labs, SAIC, and ONR. Dr. Arkin serves/served on the Editorial
Boards of IEEE Intelligent Systems, Environmentally Conscious Manufacturing,
Autonomous Robots, Machine Intelligence and Robotic Control, and
Applied Intelligence. He is the Series Editor for the MIT Press book series
Intelligent Robotics and Autonomous Agents.He
also is a consultant for several major companies in the area of intelligent
robotic systems. Prof. Arkin currently serves on the Administrative Committee
of the IEEE Robotics and Automation Society and on the National Science
Foundation's Robotics Council.