Federated Single-Agent Robotics: Multi-Robot Coordination Without Intra-Robot Multi-Agent Fragmentation
Xue Qin, Simin Luan, John See, Cong Yang, and Zhijun Li

TL;DR
This paper introduces FSAR, a novel multi-robot coordination architecture that maintains each robot as a single agent, enabling more effective federation-based coordination without intra-robot fragmentation.
Contribution
Proposes a federated architecture for multi-robot systems that preserves single-agent integrity within robots, improving governance and recovery over traditional decomposition methods.
Findings
Significant improvements in governance locality and recovery containment.
Reduction in authority conflicts and policy violations.
Statistically significant performance gains over baseline methods.
Abstract
As embodied robots move toward fleet-scale operation, multi-robot coordination is becoming a central systems challenge. Existing approaches often treat this as motivation for increasing internal multi-agent decomposition within each robot. We argue for a different principle: multi-robot coordination does not require intra-robot multi-agent fragmentation. Each robot should remain a single embodied agent with its own persistent runtime, local policy scope, capability state, and recovery authority, while coordination emerges through federation across robots at the fleet level. We present Federated Single-Agent Robotics (FSAR), a runtime architecture for multi-robot coordination built on single-agent robot runtimes. Each robot exposes a governed capability surface rather than an internally fragmented agent society. Fleet coordination is achieved through shared capability registries,…
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