Calendar16 January 2025

Publication: Automating the Evaluation of the Scalability, Flexibility, and Robustness of Collective Behaviors for Robot Swarms Publication: Automating the Evaluation of the Scalability, Flexibility, and Robustness of Collective Behaviors for Robot Swarms

Robot swarms are large self-organizing groups of robots that coordinate to collectively perform missions that escape their individual capabilities. In a robot swarm, the individuals operate using local perception and communication, without relying on a leader or external infrastructure for coordination. These characteristics help robot swarms achieve desirable properties, such as scalability, flexibility, and robustness.

In this work, EMERGE partners from the University of Bristol use recently proposed experimental protocols to evaluate these properties in various typical collective behaviors for robot swarms. The authors focus on demonstrating that the joint application of defined protocols can help streamline and automate evaluation and reporting processes in swarm robotics research. In their experiments, instances of robot control software for typical collective behaviors are systematically simulated and evaluated across different environmental configurations and swarm sizes. They show how automated tools can facilitate the evaluation of swarm robotics properties.

Read the paper in the link below.