Abstract
Combining tasks, melding their activities in sequence and in parallel, in order to achieve the desired goal is a challenging research topic. In many practical applications, tasks could be fulfilled even though the robot does not achieve a perfect matching with a given quantitative objective. Thus, it could be possible to carry out other activities, mildly conflicting with the current goal, yet providing benefits for the overall execution of a complex sequence of tasks. This paper proposes i) a criteria to evaluate the execution of a monitored task, ii) an enriched task specification to express the tolerance with which a goal is fulfilled, so that iii) a sequence of tasks can be executed concurrently, on the basis of monitored quantities. Furthermore, the paper reports a classification of conflicting scenarios for a finer selection of the scheduler policy. Finally, results from experimental scenarios show the potential benefits of the proposed methodology.
- Experimental videos can be found in Multimedia
- Presentation Slides
- Paper on Lirias@KULeuven (openaccess)
- Other sources: final version available on IEEEXplore
- To Cite this work, please refer to the follow
@INPROCEEDINGS{
ScioniIROS2014,
author={Scioni, E. and Borghesan, G. and
Bruyninckx, H. and Bonfe, M.},
booktitle={Intelligent Robots and Systems (IROS 2014),
2014 IEEE/RSJ International Conference on},
title={A framework for formal specification of robotic
constraint-based tasks and their concurrent execution
with online qos monitoring},
year={2014},
month={Sept},
pages={2963-2969},
keywords={formal specification;monitoring;robots;
scheduling;task analysis;concurrent execution;
formal specification;online QoS monitoring;
robotic constraint-based tasks;scheduler policy;
task specification;Aerospace electronics;Joints;Mobile communication;Monitoring;
Quality of service;Robot kinematics},
doi={10.1109/IROS.2014.6942971},}