
Proceedings Paper
Common world model for unmanned systemsFormat | Member Price | Non-Member Price |
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$17.00 | $21.00 |
Paper Abstract
The Robotic Collaborative Technology Alliance (RCTA) seeks to provide adaptive robot capabilities which move
beyond traditional metric algorithms to include cognitive capabilities. Key to this effort is the Common World Model,
which moves beyond the state-of-the-art by representing the world using metric, semantic, and symbolic information. It
joins these layers of information to define objects in the world. These objects may be reasoned upon jointly using
traditional geometric, symbolic cognitive algorithms and new computational nodes formed by the combination of these
disciplines. The Common World Model must understand how these objects relate to each other. Our world model
includes the concept of Self-Information about the robot. By encoding current capability, component status, task
execution state, and histories we track information which enables the robot to reason and adapt its performance using
Meta-Cognition and Machine Learning principles. The world model includes models of how aspects of the environment
behave, which enable prediction of future world states. To manage complexity, we adopted a phased implementation
approach to the world model. We discuss the design of “Phase 1” of this world model, and interfaces by tracing
perception data through the system from the source to the meta-cognitive layers provided by ACT-R and SS-RICS. We
close with lessons learned from implementation and how the design relates to Open Architecture.
Paper Details
Date Published: 17 May 2013
PDF: 9 pages
Proc. SPIE 8741, Unmanned Systems Technology XV, 87410O (17 May 2013); doi: 10.1117/12.2016606
Published in SPIE Proceedings Vol. 8741:
Unmanned Systems Technology XV
Robert E. Karlsen; Douglas W. Gage; Charles M. Shoemaker; Grant R. Gerhart, Editor(s)
PDF: 9 pages
Proc. SPIE 8741, Unmanned Systems Technology XV, 87410O (17 May 2013); doi: 10.1117/12.2016606
Show Author Affiliations
Robert Michael S. Dean, General Dynamics Robotic Systems (United States)
Published in SPIE Proceedings Vol. 8741:
Unmanned Systems Technology XV
Robert E. Karlsen; Douglas W. Gage; Charles M. Shoemaker; Grant R. Gerhart, Editor(s)
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