Robust control for multi-legged elongate robots in noisy environments
Baxi Chong, Juntao He, Daniel Irvine, Tianyu Wang, Esteban Flores, Daniel Soto, Jianfeng Lin, Zhaochen Xu, Vincent R Nienhusser, Grigoriy Blekherman, Daniel I. Goldman

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel control paradigm for multi-legged elongate robots that leverages communication theory concepts to achieve robust, terrain-agnostic locomotion in noisy, unstructured environments through passive mechanical responses and feedback control.
Contribution
It develops a new framework connecting robot-environment interaction with communication theory, enabling systematic design of robust control strategies for MERs in complex terrains.
Findings
Achieves reliable open-loop locomotion on noisy landscapes
Demonstrates effective control with terrain noise twice the robot's height
Integrates mechanical intelligence with feedback control for robustness
Abstract
Modern two and four legged robots exhibit impressive mobility on complex terrain, largely attributed to advancement in learning algorithms. However, these systems often rely on high-bandwidth sensing and onboard computation to perceive/respond to terrain uncertainties. Further, current locomotion strategies typically require extensive robot-specific training, limiting their generalizability across platforms. Building on our prior research connecting robot-environment interaction and communication theory, we develop a new paradigm to construct robust and simply controlled multi-legged elongate robots (MERs) capable of operating effectively in cluttered, unstructured environments. In this framework, each leg-ground contact is thought of as a basic active contact (bac), akin to bits in signal transmission. Reliable locomotion can be achieved in open-loop on "noisy" landscapes via…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsRobotic Locomotion and Control · Modular Robots and Swarm Intelligence · Prosthetics and Rehabilitation Robotics
