The new tendency in mobile robots is to crete non-Cartesian system based on reactions to their environment. This emerging technology is known as Evolutionary Robotics, which is combined with the Biorobotic field. This new approach brings cost-effective solutions, flexibility, robustness, and dynamism into the design of mobile robots. It also provides fast reactions to the sensory inputs, and new interpretation of the environment or surroundings of the mobile robot. The Subsumption Architecture (SA) and the action selection dynamics developed by Brooks and Maes, respectively, have successfully obtained autonomous mobile robots initiating this new trend of the Evolutionary Robotics. Their design keeps the mobile robot control simple. This work present a biologically inspired modification of these schemes. The hippocampal-CA3-based neural network developed by Williams Levy is used to implement the SA, while the action selection dynamics emerge from iterations of the levels of competence implemented with the HCA3. This replacement by the HCA3 results in a closer biological model than the SA, combining the Behavior-based intelligence theory with neuroscience. The design is kept simple, and it is implemented in the Khepera Miniature Mobile Robot. The used control scheme obtains an autonomous mobile robot that can be used to execute a mail delivery system and surveillance task inside a building floor.
[1]
Yoram Koren,et al.
Error eliminating rapid ultrasonic firing for mobile robot obstacle avoidance
,
1995,
IEEE Trans. Robotics Autom..
[2]
Rodney A. Brooks,et al.
A Robust Layered Control Syste For A Mobile Robot
,
2022
.
[3]
Rodney A. Brooks.
Vision and spatial modeling for mobile robots
,
1989,
International Workshop on Industrial Applications of Machine Intelligence and Vision,.
[4]
Francesco Mondada,et al.
Evolution of homing navigation in a real mobile robot
,
1996,
IEEE Trans. Syst. Man Cybern. Part B.
[5]
Rodney A. Brooks,et al.
A robot that walks; emergent behaviors from a carefully evolved network
,
1989,
Proceedings, 1989 International Conference on Robotics and Automation.
[6]
R A Brooks,et al.
New Approaches to Robotics
,
1991,
Science.