Exploiting Subgraph Structure in Multi-Robot Path Planning

Multi-robot path planning is difficult due to the combinatorial explosion of the search space with every new robot added. Complete search of the combined state-space soon becomes intractable. In this paper we present a novel form of abstraction that allows us to plan much more efficiently. The key to this abstraction is the partitioning of the map into subgraphs of known structure with entry and exit restrictions which we can represent compactly. Planning then becomes a search in the much smaller space of subgraph configurations. Once an abstract plan is found, it can be quickly resolved into a correct (but possibly sub-optimal) concrete plan without the need for further search. We prove that this technique is sound and complete and demonstrate its practical effectiveness on a real map. A contending solution, prioritised planning, is also evaluated and shown to have similar performance albeit at the cost of completeness. The two approaches are not necessarily conflicting; we demonstrate how they can be combined into a single algorithm which outperforms either approach alone.

READ FULL TEXT
research
05/03/2018

Two Techniques That Enhance the Performance of Multi-robot Prioritized Path Planning

We introduce and empirically evaluate two techniques aimed at enhancing ...
research
11/03/2015

A Pareto Optimal D* Search Algorithm for Multiobjective Path Planning

Path planning is one of the most vital elements of mobile robotics, prov...
research
01/16/2014

MAPP: a Scalable Multi-Agent Path Planning Algorithm with Tractability and Completeness Guarantees

Multi-agent path planning is a challenging problem with numerous real-li...
research
06/19/2021

Learning Space Partitions for Path Planning

Path planning, the problem of efficiently discovering high-reward trajec...
research
07/30/2014

Backwards State-space Reduction for Planning in Dynamic Knowledge Bases

In this paper we address the problem of planning in rich domains, where ...
research
09/02/2019

An Abstraction-Free Method for Multi-Robot Temporal Logic Optimal Control Synthesis

The majority of existing Linear Temporal Logic (LTL) planning methods re...
research
02/03/2018

Path Planning for Minimizing the Expected Cost till Success

Consider a general path planning problem of a robot on a graph with edge...

Please sign up or login with your details

Forgot password? Click here to reset