Mapping Opaque and Confined Environments Using Proprioception

Jacob Everist and Wei-Min Shen. Mapping Opaque and Confined Environments Using Proprioception. In Proc. 2009 IEEE Intl. Conf. on Robotics and Automation, Kobe, Japan, May 2009.

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Abstract

Mapping opaque and confined environments such as caves and pipes is a challenging problem for mobile robots because sensor information is severely limited to the immediate proximity of the robot due to the extreme environmental conditions.The robot must also be flexible and agile in unstructured environments while still providing accurate pose estimation. This paper presents a solution to mapping a 2-dimensional tube by using only a snake robot�s proprioceptive joint anglesensors. We assume that the tube is sufficiently smooth and that we know the tube width. We propose techniques for (1) pose estimation of a snake robot by using a self-posture motion model, (2) correcting error in pose estimation usingonly the snake�s internal configuration over time, and (3) building environmental features using only self-occupancy and contact detection. Our goal is to use the minimal amount of sensor information possible to build an accurate spatial mapof the environment. We have tested the proposed techniques in simulated environments and experimental results show that they are both effective and efficient for mapping tube environments. We plan to extend these techniques to deal with more complexconfined environments beyond single-path tubes.

BibTeX Entry

@InProceedings{everist2009_mapping_opaque_environments,
  abstract	= {Mapping opaque and confined environments such as caves and pipes is a challenging problem for mobile robots because sensor information is severely limited to the immediate proximity of the robot due to the extreme environmental conditions.
The robot must also be flexible and agile in unstructured environments while still providing accurate pose estimation. This paper presents a solution to mapping a 2-dimensional tube by using only a snake robot�s proprioceptive joint angle
sensors. We assume that the tube is sufficiently smooth and that we know the tube width. We propose techniques for (1) pose estimation of a snake robot by using a self-posture motion model, (2) correcting error in pose estimation using
only the snake�s internal configuration over time, and (3) building environmental features using only self-occupancy and contact detection. Our goal is to use the minimal amount of sensor information possible to build an accurate spatial map
of the environment. We have tested the proposed techniques in simulated environments and experimental results show that they are both effective and efficient for mapping tube environments. We plan to extend these techniques to deal with more complex
confined environments beyond single-path tubes.},
  address	= {Kobe, Japan},
  author	= {Jacob Everist and Wei-Min Shen},
  booktitle	= icra-09,
  month		= may,
  title		= {Mapping Opaque and Confined Environments Using Proprioception},
  year		= {2009}
}