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» Measuring Motion Expressiveness in Wheeled Mobile Robots
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88
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ICRA
2005
IEEE
180views Robotics» more  ICRA 2005»
15 years 3 months ago
Transference of Evolved Unmanned Aerial Vehicle Controllers to a Wheeled Mobile Robot
— Transference of controllers evolved in simulation to real vehicles is an important issue in evolutionary robotics (ER). We have previously evolved autonomous navigation control...
Gregory J. Barlow, Leonardo Mattos, Edward Grant, ...
80
Voted
ICRA
2008
IEEE
162views Robotics» more  ICRA 2008»
15 years 4 months ago
Vision-based estimation of slip angle for mobile robots and planetary rovers
— For a mobile robot it is critical to detect and compensate for slippage, especially when driving in rough terrain environments. Due to its highly unpredictable nature, drift la...
Giulio Reina, Genya Ishigami, Keiji Nagatani, Kazu...
ICRA
2006
IEEE
138views Robotics» more  ICRA 2006»
15 years 3 months ago
An Analysis of Rollover Stability Measurement for High-speed Mobile Robots
– Mobile robots and passenger vehicles are frequently required to operate at high speeds, on terrain that is sloped or uneven. These systems can be susceptible to rollover, parti...
Steven C. Peters, Karl Iagnemma
CVPR
2001
IEEE
15 years 11 months ago
3D Simultaneous Localisation and Map-Building Using Active Vision for a Robot Moving on Undulating Terrain
Work in simultaneous localisation and map-building ("SLAM") for mobile robots has focused on the simplified case in which a robot is considered to move in two dimensions...
Andrew J. Davison, Nobuyuki Kita
IROS
2007
IEEE
148views Robotics» more  IROS 2007»
15 years 4 months ago
Kinematic analysis and control of an omnidirectional mobile robot in rough terrain
—An omnidirectional mobile robot is able, kinematically, to move in any direction regardless of current pose. To date, nearly all designs and analyses of omnidirectional robots h...
Martin Udengaard, Karl Iagnemma