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Towards applied swarm robotics: current limitations and enablers

Miquel Kegeleirs, Mauro Birattari

2025Frontiers in Robotics and AI8 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Swarm robotics addresses the design, deployment, and analysis of large groups of robots that collaborate to perform tasks in a decentralized manner. Research in this field has predominantly relied on simulations or small-scale robots with limited sensing, actuation, and computational capabilities. Consequently, despite significant advancements, swarm robotics has yet to see widespread commercial or industrial application. A major barrier to practical deployment is the lack of affordable, modern, and robust platforms suitable for real-world scenarios. Moreover, a narrow definition of what swarm robotics should be has restricted the scope of potential applications. In this paper, we argue that the development of more advanced robotic platforms-incorporating state-of-the-art technologies such as SLAM, computer vision, and reliable communication systems-and the adoption of a broader interpretation of swarm robotics could significantly expand its range of applicability. This would enable robot swarms to tackle a wider variety of real-world tasks and integrate more effectively with existing systems, ultimately paving the way for successful deployment.

Topics & Concepts

RoboticsSoftware deploymentSwarm roboticsArtificial intelligenceComputer scienceSwarm behaviourRobotScope (computer science)Field (mathematics)Variety (cybernetics)Ant roboticsSystems engineeringHuman–computer interactionMobile robotEngineeringSoftware engineeringRobot controlPure mathematicsProgramming languageMathematicsModular Robots and Swarm IntelligenceDistributed Control Multi-Agent SystemsOpportunistic and Delay-Tolerant Networks
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