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Bottom-Up Mechanism and Improved Contract Net Protocol for Dynamic Task Planning of Heterogeneous Earth Observation Resources.

Authors :
Liu, Baoju
Deng, Min
Wu, Guohua
Pei, Xinyu
Li, Haifeng
Pedrycz, Witold
Source :
IEEE Transactions on Systems, Man & Cybernetics. Systems; Oct2022, Vol. 52 Issue 10, p6183-6196, 14p
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Earth observation resources are becoming increasingly indispensable in disaster relief, damage assessment, and other related domains. Many unpredictable factors, such as changes in observation task requirements, bad weather, and resource malfunctions, may cause the scheduled observation scheme to become infeasible. In these cases, it is crucial to promptly reformulate high-quality observation schemes while exerting minimal negative effects on the previously scheduled tasks. Accordingly, in this study, a bottom-up distributed coordination framework together with an improved contract net is proposed, aiming to facilitate dynamic task replanning for heterogeneous Earth observation resources. This hierarchical framework consists of three levels: 1) neighboring resource coordination; 2) single planning center coordination; and 3) multiple planning center coordination. The observation tasks affected by unpredicted factors are managed along with a bottom-up route from resources to planning centers. This bottom-up distributed coordination framework transfers part of the computing load to various nodes of the observation systems to plan tasks more efficiently and robustly. To support the prompt replanning of multiple tasks to proper Earth observation resources in dynamic environments, we propose a multiround combinatorial allocation (MCA) method. Moreover, a new float interval-based local search algorithm is proposed to quickly obtain a promising replanning scheme. The simulation results demonstrate that the MCA method can achieve a better task completion rate for large-scale tasks with satisfactory time efficiency. In addition, this method can efficiently obtain replanning schemes based on original schemes in dynamic environments. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
21682216
Volume :
52
Issue :
10
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
IEEE Transactions on Systems, Man & Cybernetics. Systems
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
159210423
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1109/TSMC.2022.3143158