Autonomous Multirobot Systems Course
Contents
Autonomous Multirobot Systems 2015
Important Announcements
New:
- Please sign up with piazza for this course: [piazza.com]
- Project 1A description 2015_Project_1A due Friday January 23 at 11:55PM
Course Overview
We will survey the inspiration and motivation for multirobot systems, the unique challenges in this field and the wide range of solutions developed thus far. Students will learn about the theoretical and algorithmic aspects of multi-agent and multi-robot systems, including communication, coordination and cooperation. This is a "hands-on" class requiring the students to develop and evaluate their own simulated multirobot system. Autonomous MultiRobot Systems is a graduate course, but undergraduate students with strong programming skills and a background in robotics or AI are welcome.
Topics to be covered:
- Multiagent architectures.
- Communication, cooperation and coordination in mulitrobot systems.
- Diversity.
- Taxonomies of multirobot systems and tasks.
- Adversarial domains including robot soccer.
- Example biological multiagent systems.
- Multirobot learning.
Who the Course is For
The course is open to and intended for graduate and upper level undergraduate students in Computer Science and Engineering
Prerequisites: Students should have strong programming skills and some familiarity with Linux. Here's a short test to check if you have strong programming skills: quiz. If you don't do well on that quiz, you should either drop the course, or be sure to plan so that you can devote extra time to the course.
Student Responsibilities
- Read the emails sent to the course email list. Check at least daily.
- Participate in class and via the piazza site.
- Don't plagiarize.
Course Logistics
- Instructor: Associate Professor Tucker Balch
- Office hours: Tu/Th 1:30-2:30 (after class) or by appointment
- firstname at cc.gatech.edu
- phone 678-523-8685
- TAs: Arindam Bose, Jayita Bhattacharya
Grading
- 70%: Projects
- 10%: Project 1: Drunken Sailor
- 10%: Project 2: ASCII Soccer
- 10%: Project 3: Herds and flocks
- 10%: Project 4: Predator / Prey
- 30%: Final Project
- 20%: Presentations
- 15% Best one
- 5% Other one
- 10%: Class participation/pop quizzes
- Drop worst 2
Late policy: -5% per day late
Plagiarism
Unless specifically stated otherwise I expect all code that you submit was written by you. I will present some libraries in class that you are allowed to use. Otherwise, all source code, images and write ups you provide should have been created by you alone.
What is allowed:
- Meeting with other students to discuss implementations. You should talk about solutions at the pseudo code level.
- Sharing snippets of code to solve specific (small) problems such as examples of how to address sections of arrays in Python. In this case the shared code should not be more than 5 lines.
- Searching the web for other solution outlines that you may draw on (but not copy directly). If you are inspired by a solution on the web, you MUST cite that code with comments in your code.
What is not allowed:
- Copying sections of code longer than 5 lines. Note that merely changing variable names does not suffice.
- Copying code from the web.
- Use of ideas from the web that are not cited in comments.
Week 1
Tuesday, 6 January, 2015
Course overview and intro
Definition of autonomy (NASA Video)
Example of multi agent coordination (Harvard Video)
Drunken Sailor description
Thursday 8 January 2015
Intro and discussion of ASCII Soccer
How does sensing affect necessity for diversity?
Week 2
Tuesday, 13 January, 2015
Introduction to the deliberative/reactive dichotomy
AI winter
Gray Walter
First intro to reactive robotics
Thursday 15 January 2015
Class cancelled