Tongjia Zheng;Zhenyuan Yuan;Mollik Nayyar;Alan R. Wagner;Minghui Zhu;Hai Lin
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Emergency evacuation describes a complex situation involving time-critical decision-making by evacuees. Mobile robots are being actively explored as a potential solution to provide timely guidance. This work studies a robot-guided crowd evacuation problem where a small group of robots is used to guide a large human crowd to safe locations. The challenge lies in how to use microlevel human-robot interactions to indirectly influence a population that significantly outnumbers the robots to achieve the collective evacuation objective. To address the challenge, we follow a two-scale modeling strategy and explore hydrodynamic models, which consist of a family of microscopic social force models that describe how human movements are locally affected by other humans, the environment, and robots, and associated macroscopic equations for the temporal and spatial evolution of the crowd density and flow velocity. We design controllers for the robots, such that they not only automatically explore the environment (with unknown dynamic obstacles) to cover it as much as possible, but also dynamically adjust the directions of their local navigation force fields based on the real-time macrostates of the crowd to guide the crowd to a safe location. We prove the stability of the proposed evacuation algorithm and conduct extensive simulations to investigate the performance of the algorithm with different combinations of human numbers, robot numbers, and obstacle settings.
期刊介绍:
The IEEE Transactions on Control Systems Technology publishes high quality technical papers on technological advances in control engineering. The word technology is from the Greek technologia. The modern meaning is a scientific method to achieve a practical purpose. Control Systems Technology includes all aspects of control engineering needed to implement practical control systems, from analysis and design, through simulation and hardware. A primary purpose of the IEEE Transactions on Control Systems Technology is to have an archival publication which will bridge the gap between theory and practice. Papers are published in the IEEE Transactions on Control System Technology which disclose significant new knowledge, exploratory developments, or practical applications in all aspects of technology needed to implement control systems, from analysis and design through simulation, and hardware.