Indoor Localization and Navigation for a Mobile Robot Equipped with Rotating Ultrasonic Sensors Using a Smartphone as the Robot's Brain
Identifying the current location of a robot is a prerequisite for robot navigation. To localize a robot, one popular way is to use particle filters that estimate the posterior probabilistic density of a robot's state space. But this Bayesian recursion approach is computationally expensive. Most microcontrollers in a small mobile robot cannot afford it. The authors propose to use a smartphone as a robot's brain in which heavy-duty computations take place whereas an embedded microcontroller on the robot processes rudimentary sensors such as ultrasonic and touch sensors. In their design, a smartphone is wirelessly connected to a robot via Bluetooth by which distance measurements from the robot are sent to the smartphone. Then the smartphone takes responsible for computationally expensive operations like executing the particle filter algorithm. In this paper, the authors designed a mobile robot and its control architecture to demonstrate that the robot can navigate indoor environment while avoiding obstacles and localize its current position.
Year of publication: |
2016
|
---|---|
Authors: | Lim, Jongil ; Lee, Seokju ; Tewolde, Girma ; Kwon, Jaerock |
Published in: |
International Journal of Handheld Computing Research (IJHCR). - IGI Global, ISSN 1947-9166, ZDB-ID 2703345-4. - Vol. 7.2016, 1 (01.01.), p. 1-11
|
Publisher: |
IGI Global |
Subject: | Localization | Mobile Robot | Navigation | Particle Filter | Smartphone | Ultrasonic Sensor |
Saved in:
Saved in favorites
Similar items by subject
-
Positioning errors consideration for indoor mobile robot design
Louchene, Ahmed, (2003)
-
Where am I? A tutorial on mobile vehicle localization
Durrant‐Whyte, Hugh, (1994)
-
Robots in the news: camera robot navigation in television studio
Wright, Keith, (1994)
- More ...
Similar items by person