Difference between revisions of "The Robotic Development Subsystem"
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+ | The BABEL ROBOTIC DEVELOPMENT SUBSYSTEM (BRDS) addresses the problem of designing low-level modules for robotics control architectures under the BABEL development environment. These modules are typically developed by different researchers or students and their integration into any high-level architecture represents a big challenge due to the heterogeneity and the variety of involved tasks. This specification aims to normalize the structure of the low-level part of robotics control architectures, related with sensory and motor issues. Their interfaces are normalized in an effort to give a long-term stabilized repertory of modules, as well as leading to architectures largely independent of the particular robotic platform they are executed on. Architecture designers are free to specify the high-level modules (world modeling, task planning or motion planning) as desired and exploiting the robot-independent services offered by this low-level architecture. | ||
+ | You can navigate through the BRDS documentation by following these links: | ||
** [[ MAPIR's Module Architecture | Index ]] | ** [[ MAPIR's Module Architecture | Index ]] |
Revision as of 10:36, 25 May 2009
The BABEL ROBOTIC DEVELOPMENT SUBSYSTEM (BRDS) addresses the problem of designing low-level modules for robotics control architectures under the BABEL development environment. These modules are typically developed by different researchers or students and their integration into any high-level architecture represents a big challenge due to the heterogeneity and the variety of involved tasks. This specification aims to normalize the structure of the low-level part of robotics control architectures, related with sensory and motor issues. Their interfaces are normalized in an effort to give a long-term stabilized repertory of modules, as well as leading to architectures largely independent of the particular robotic platform they are executed on. Architecture designers are free to specify the high-level modules (world modeling, task planning or motion planning) as desired and exploiting the robot-independent services offered by this low-level architecture.
You can navigate through the BRDS documentation by following these links: