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Mobile Robots Get a Leg Up From a More-Is-Better Communications Principle

Can quantity equate to quality?

Photo by Viktor Talashuk on Unsplash
Baxi Chong
Wed, 09/27/2023 - 12:01
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Adding legs to robots that have minimal awareness of the environment around them can help them operate more effectively in difficult terrain, my colleagues and I found.

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We were inspired by mathematician and engineer Claude Shannon’s communication theory about how to transmit signals over distance. Instead of spending a huge amount of money to build the perfect wire, Shannon illustrated that it is good enough to use redundancy to reliably convey information over noisy communication channels. We wondered if we could do the same thing for transporting cargo via robots. That is, if we want to transport cargo over “noisy” terrain, say fallen trees and large rocks, in a reasonable amount of time, could we do it by just adding legs to the robot carrying the cargo—and do so without sensors and cameras on the robot?

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