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Cooperative Robots and Sensor Networks

A special issue of Sensors (ISSN 1424-8220). This special issue belongs to the section "Sensor Networks".

Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (15 October 2021) | Viewed by 4678

Special Issue Editor


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Guest Editor
School of Engineering, University of Seville, Avda. Camino de los Descubrimientos, 41092 Seville, Spain
Interests: robot perception; cooperative perception; multi-robot systems; robot–sensor network cooperation; localization/mapping; SLAM; aerial robots
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Special Issue Information

Dear Colleagues,

Robots and sensor networks (SNs) are key technologies in the context of Internet-of-Things (IoT). In the last several years, advances in miniaturization, sensors/actuators, computing, batteries, and wireless intercommunication have boosted the development of networked robotic systems, sensor networks, and robot–SN cooperation schemes. Cooperative robot–SN schemes enable interesting synergies in many problems, providing unprecedented capabilities. The combined perception between distributed measurements from SN and robot measurements, the mobility of robots for transporting/deploying and localization, and robot–SN cooperation for measurement monitoring/collection are a few examples. Cooperative robots and static and mobile SNs pose challenging issues not only in their architectures, cooperation schemes, algorithms, protocols, perception techniques, planning, modelling, and security issues, but also in devices and hardware design, implementation, real-world deployments, and new applications.

This Special Issue expects innovative works and surveys to explore new trends, frontiers, and challenges in the field of cooperative robots and sensor networks including new architectures, techniques, and protocols, and well as implementation issues, devices, real-world deployments, and new applications. The topics of interest include, but are not limited to:

  • Robot–SN cooperation;
  • Robot cooperation;
  • Architectures for cooperation;
  • Robot–SN communication;
  • Distributed computation;
  • SN algorithms for cooperation with robots;
  • Robot–SN modeling, simulation, and performance;
  • Robot control and planning for integration with SNs;
  • Robot–SN perception;
  • Robot–SN security issues and protocols;
  • Robot–SN services and applications;
  • Robot–wearable device cooperation;
  • Devices and hardware design;
  • Testbeds;
  • Implementation issues;
  • Real-world deployments and lessons learned;
  • Applications: data collection, wireless aerial networks, target detection, smart cities, smart environments, smart homes, and monitoring, among many others.

Dr. José Ramiro Martínez-De-Dios
Guest Editor

Manuscript Submission Information

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Keywords

  • Internet of Things
  • Sensor networks
  • Networked robots
  • Ubiquitous systems
  • Pervasive computing

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Published Papers (1 paper)

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25 pages, 44781 KiB  
Article
The Internet of Cooperative Agents Architecture (X-IoCA) for Robots, Hybrid Sensor Networks, and MEC Centers in Complex Environments: A Search and Rescue Case Study
by Juan Bravo-Arrabal, Manuel Toscano-Moreno, J. J. Fernandez-Lozano, Anthony Mandow, Jose Antonio Gomez-Ruiz and Alfonso García-Cerezo
Sensors 2021, 21(23), 7843; https://doi.org/10.3390/s21237843 - 25 Nov 2021
Cited by 15 | Viewed by 3610
Abstract
Cloud robotics and advanced communications can foster a step-change in cooperative robots and hybrid wireless sensor networks (H-WSN) for demanding environments (e.g., disaster response, mining, demolition, and nuclear sites) by enabling the timely sharing of data and computational resources between robot and human [...] Read more.
Cloud robotics and advanced communications can foster a step-change in cooperative robots and hybrid wireless sensor networks (H-WSN) for demanding environments (e.g., disaster response, mining, demolition, and nuclear sites) by enabling the timely sharing of data and computational resources between robot and human teams. However, the operational complexity of such multi-agent systems requires defining effective architectures, coping with implementation details, and testing in realistic deployments. This article proposes X-IoCA, an Internet of robotic things (IoRT) and communication architecture consisting of a hybrid and heterogeneous network of wireless transceivers (H2WTN), based on LoRa and BLE technologies, and a robot operating system (ROS) network. The IoRT is connected to a feedback information system (FIS) distributed among multi-access edge computing (MEC) centers. Furthermore, we present SAR-IoCA, an implementation of the architecture for search and rescue (SAR) integrated into a 5G network. The FIS for this application consists of an SAR-FIS (including a path planner for UGVs considering risks detected by a LoRa H-WSN) and an ROS-FIS (for real-time monitoring and processing of information published throughout the ROS network). Moreover, we discuss lessons learned from using SAR-IoCA in a realistic exercise where three UGVs, a UAV, and responders collaborated to rescue victims from a tunnel accessible through rough terrain. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Cooperative Robots and Sensor Networks)
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