Advances in Plan-Based Control of Robotic Agents International Seminar, Dagstuhl Castle, Germany, October 21-26, 2001, Revised Papers / edited by Michael Beetz, Leonidas Guibas, Joachim Herztberg, Malik Ghallab, Martha E. Pollack.

In recent years, autonomous robots, including Xavier, Martha [1], Rhino [2,3], Minerva,and Remote Agent, have shown impressive performance in long-term demonstrations. In NASA’s Deep Space program, for example, an - tonomous spacecraft controller, called the Remote Agent [5], has autonomously perfor...

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Bibliographic Details
Corporate Author: SpringerLink (Online service)
Other Authors: Beetz, Michael (Editor), Guibas, Leonidas (Editor), Herztberg, Joachim (Editor), Ghallab, Malik (Editor), Pollack, Martha E. (Editor)
Format: eBook
Language:English
Published: Berlin, Heidelberg : Springer Berlin Heidelberg : Imprint: Springer, 2002.
Edition:1st ed. 2002.
Series:Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence ; 2466
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Summary:In recent years, autonomous robots, including Xavier, Martha [1], Rhino [2,3], Minerva,and Remote Agent, have shown impressive performance in long-term demonstrations. In NASA’s Deep Space program, for example, an - tonomous spacecraft controller, called the Remote Agent [5], has autonomously performed a scienti?c experiment in space. At Carnegie Mellon University, Xavier [6], another autonomous mobile robot, navigated through an o?ce - vironment for more than a year, allowing people to issue navigation commands and monitor their execution via the Internet. In 1998, Minerva [7] acted for 13 days as a museum tourguide in the Smithsonian Museum, and led several thousand people through an exhibition. These autonomous robots have in common that they rely on plan-based c- trol in order to achieve better problem-solving competence. In the plan-based approach, robots generate control actions by maintaining and executing a plan that is e?ective and has a high expected utility with respect to the robots’ c- rent goals and beliefs. Plans are robot control programs that a robot can not only execute but also reason about and manipulate [4]. Thus, a plan-based c- troller is able to manage and adapt the robot’s intended course of action — the plan — while executing it and can thereby better achieve complex and changing tasks.
Physical Description:VIII, 296 p. online resource.
ISBN:9783540377245
DOI:10.1007/3-540-37724-7