Back to Search Start Over

Emergence of Diversity in a Group of Identical Bio-Robots

Authors :
Alessandra Vitanza
Luca Patanè
Paolo Arena
Source :
International Journal of Advanced Robotic Systems, Vol 12 (2015)
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
SAGE Publishing, 2015.

Abstract

Learning capabilities, often guided by competition/cooperation, play a fundamental and ubiquitous role in living beings. Moreover, several behaviours, such as feeding and courtship, involve environmental exploration and exploitation, including local competition, and lead to a global benefit for the colony. This can be considered as a form of global cooperation, even if the individual agent is not aware of the overall effect. This paper aims to demonstrate that identical biorobots, endowed with simple neural controllers, can evolve diversified behaviours and roles when competing for the same resources in the same arena. These behaviours also produce a benefit in terms of time and energy spent by the whole group. The robots are tasked with a classical foraging task structured through the cyclic activation of resources. The result is that each individual robot, while competing to reach the maximum number of available targets, tends to prefer a specific sequence of subtasks. This indirectly leads to the global result of task partitioning whereby the cumulative energy spent, in terms of the overall travelled distance and the time needed to complete the task, tends to be minimized. A series of simulation experiments is conducted using different numbers of robots and scenarios: the common emergent result obtained is the role-specialization of each robot. The description of the neural controller and the specialization mechanisms are reported in detail and discussed.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
17298814
Volume :
12
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
International Journal of Advanced Robotic Systems
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.5e48deff20934f7e944a08801609be03
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.5772/60545