Biologically Inspired Collision Avoidance Without Distance Information
Thiago Marinho, Massi Amrouche, Dusan Stipanovic, Venanzio Cichella,, and Naira Hovakimyan

TL;DR
This paper introduces a biologically inspired collision avoidance method for mobile robots that relies solely on visual cues like LOS angle and rate, eliminating the need for distance sensors.
Contribution
It presents a new control framework for unicycle-like robots that uses only line-of-sight information for collision avoidance, inspired by animal behavior.
Findings
Achieves collision avoidance without distance measurements.
Provides theoretical guarantees for minimum separation.
Compatible with existing velocity control objectives.
Abstract
Biological evidence shows that animals are capable of evading eminent collision without using depth information, relying solely on looming stimuli. In robotics, collision avoidance among uncooperative vehicles requires measurement of relative distance to the obstacle. Small, low-cost mobile robots and UAVs might be unable to carry distance measuring sensors, like LIDARS and depth cameras. We propose a control framework suitable for a unicycle-like vehicle moving in a 2D plane that achieves collision avoidance. The control strategy is inspired by the reaction of invertebrates to approaching obstacles, relying exclusively on line-of-sight (LOS) angle, LOS angle rate, and time-to-collision as feedback. Those quantities can readily be estimated from a monocular camera vision system onboard a mobile robot. The proposed avoidance law commands the heading angle to circumvent a moving obstacle…
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