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Phormica: Photochromic Pheromone Release and Detection System for Stigmergic Coordination in Robot Swarms

Muhammad Salman, David Garzón Ramos, Ken Hasselmann, Mauro Birattari

2020Frontiers in Robotics and AI25 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Stigmergy is a form of indirect communication and coordination in which agents modify the environment to pass information to their peers. In nature, animals use stigmergy by, for example, releasing pheromone that conveys information to other members of their species. A few systems in swarm robotics research have replicated this process by introducing the concept of artificial pheromone. In this paper, we present Phormica, a system to conduct experiments in swarm robotics that enables a swarm of e-puck robots to release and detect artificial pheromone. Phormica emulates pheromone-based stigmergy thanks to the ability of robots to project UV light on the ground, which has been previously covered with a photochromic material. As a proof of concept, we test Phormica on three collective missions in which robots act collectively guided by the artificial pheromone they release and detect. Experimental results indicate that a robot swarm can effectively self-organize and act collectively by using stigmergic coordination based on the artificial pheromone provided by Phormica.

Topics & Concepts

StigmergySwarm roboticsRobotPheromoneAnt roboticsComputer scienceArtificial intelligenceSwarm behaviourRoboticsArtificial lifeSwarm intelligenceSelf organisationHuman–computer interactionMobile robotMachine learningEngineeringBiologyRobot controlEcologyParticle swarm optimizationManagement scienceModular Robots and Swarm IntelligenceDistributed Control Multi-Agent SystemsMicro and Nano Robotics
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