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One of the challenges in humanoid robotics is motion control. Interacting with humans requires impedance control algorithms, as well as tackling the problem of the closed kinematic chains which occur when both feet touch the ground. However, pure impedance control for totally autonomous robots is difficult to realize, as this algorithm needs very precise sensors for force and speed of the actuated parts, as well as very high sampling rates for the controller input signals. Both requirements lead to a complex and heavy weight design, which makes up for heavy machines unusable in RoboCup Soccer competitions.
A lightweight motor controller was developed that can be used for admittance and impedance control as well as for model predictive control algorithms to further improve the gait of the robot.
In previous work we [1] and other authors (e.g. [2]) have shown that agent-based systems are successful in optimizing delivery plans of single logistics companies and are meanwhile successfully productive in industry. In this paper we show that agent-based systems are particularly useful to also optimize transport across logistics companies. In intercompany optimization, privacy is of major importance between the otherwise competing companies. Some data has to be treated strictly private like the cost model or the constraint model. Other data like order information has to be shared. However, typically the amount of orders released to other companies has also to be limited. We show that our agent-based approach can be easily fine tuned to trade off privacy against the benefit of cooperation.
Deutschland hat nicht zuletzt durch seine zentrale Lage eine führende Rolle im Bereich der Transportlogistik in Europa übernommen. Allerdings stehen die großen Logistikunternehmen in den letzten Jahren zunehmend vor neuen Herausforderungen. Zum einen steigt die Menge zu transportierender Güter jährlich, zum anderen entstanden durch Verschmelzungen großer Logistikunternehmen wie z. B. Deutsche Post, Danzas und Exel, UPS und Fritz riesige Fahrzeugflotten, deren effiziente Planung die Unternehmen vor enorme Probleme stellt. Die einzige Möglichkeit, diese meist heterogenen, also aus vielen verschiedenen Verkehrsmitteln bestehenden Flotten mit herkömmlichen Mitteln effizient zu planen, ist die Aufteilung in (regionale) Geschäftsbereiche. Dadurch können viele Synergieeffekte nicht genutzt werden, was unter anderem zu unnötig hohen Transportkilometerleistungen und Leerfahrten führt. Mit Hilfe agentenbasierter Systeme können heute schon Kosteneinsparungen von 3 – 6 % bei homogenen Verkehrsmitteln erzielt werden. Das Einsparpotenzial dürfte bei heterogenen Flotten ähnlich hoch, wenn nicht noch etwas höher sein. Allerdings liefern derzeit agentenbasierte Systeme für heterogene Flotten noch keine zufriedenstellenden Ergebnisse. Durch die Kombination der beiden vorrangig für die Transportoptimierung eingesetzten Techniken agentenbasierte (bottomup) Optimierung und der klassischen (topdown)Optimierung soll auch das Einsparpotenzial von heterogenen Flotten realisiert werden. Diese Optimierung ist Gegenstand des Attractive Forschungsprojekts, das von August 2009 bis Juli 2012 im Rahmen des Programms ingenieurNachwuchs gefördert wird.
The present work ties in with the problem of bicycle road assessment that is currently done using expensive special measuring vehicles. Our alternative approach for road condition assessment is to mount a sensor device on a bicycle which sends accelerometer and gyroscope data via WiFi to a classification server. There, a prediction model determines road type and condition based on the sensor data. For the classification task, we compare different machine learning methods with each other, whereby validation accuracies of 99% can be achieved with deep residual networks such as InceptionTime. The main contribution of this work with respect to comparable work is that we achieve excellent accuracies on a realistic dataset classifying road conditions into nine distinct classes that are highly relevant for practice.
This paper describes a thorough analysis of using PPO to learn kick behaviors with simulated NAO robots in the simspark environment. The analysis includes an investigation of the influence of PPO hyperparameters, network size, training setups and performance in real games. We believe to improve the state of the art mainly in four points: first, the kicks are learned with a toed version of the NAO robot, second, we improve the reliability with respect to kickable area and avoidance of falls, third, the kick can be parameterized with desired distance and direction as input to the deep network and fourth, the approach allows to integrate the learned behavior seamlessly into soccer games. The result is a significant improvement of the general level of play.
For the RoboCup Soccer AdultSize League the humanoid robot Sweaty uses a single fully convolutional neural network to detect and localize the ball, opponents and other features on the field of play. This neural network can be trained from scratch in a few hours and is able to perform in real-time within the constraints of computational resources available on the robot. The time it takes to precess an image is approximately 11 ms. Balls and goal posts are recalled in 99 % of all cases (94.5 % for all objects) accompanied by a false detection rate of 1.2 % (5.2 % for all). The object detection and localization helped Sweaty to become finalist for the RoboCup 2017 in Nagoya.