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robot_navigation

Service robots are intended to help humans in non-industrial environments such as houses or offices. To accomplish their goal, service robots must have several skills such as object recognition and manipulation, face detection and recognition, speech recognition and synthesis, task planning and, one of the most important, navigation in dynamic environments. This repository describes a fully implemented motion-planning system that comprehends from motion and path planning algorithms to spatial representation and behavior-based active navigation.

This paper can be consulted online for free at this link. The following video shows this system working at RoboCup where we have won the Smoothest, Safest Navigation Award in 2022 and 2023.

Watch the video

Please, if you use this material, don't forget to add the following reference:

@article{negrete:2018,
author 		= {Marco Negrete and Jesus Savage and Luis Contreras},
title 		= {{A Motion-Planning System for a Domestic Service Robot}},
journal		= {{SPIIRAS Proceedings}},
volume		= {60},
number		= {5},
pages		= {5--38},
year		= {2018}
}

Setup

  1. Create an env of your choice.

e.g.

First, create a workspace:

cd ~
mkdir -p nav_ws/src

Then, clone this repository into the src folder:

cd ~/nav_ws/src
git clone https://github.com/ARTenshi/robot_navigation.git
  1. Checkout to the correct branch. Available branches are:
  • main - raw implementation for navigation considering a command velocity actuator and a laser scan sensor; additionally, an rgbd camera can be used.

  • follow_me - raw implementation of a human follower using la laser scan readings to track a person's legs [1].

  • hsr_robot - and example implementation of this repository in the HSR robot for the follow me and carry my luggage tasks.

e.g.

git checkout hsr_robot
  1. Build the project:

e.g

cd ~/nav_ws
catkin_make

Robot Navigation

Structure

Topics

TODO

Services

TODO

Initialization

Prerequisites

To use SLAM and navigation, you need to start a mapping system.

We have followed the instructions for the Cartographer ROS for the Toyota HSR as per this link

Follow me (HSR)

Start the navigation:

source ~/nav_ws/devel/setup.bash
roslaunch navigation_start navigation.launch

Start the task:

source ~/nav_ws/devel/setup.bash
roslaunch robot_tasks follow_me.launch

Carry my luggage (HSR)

In this task, the robot helps a person with her/his luggage in an unknown and unconstrained environment and should be able to return to the starting position. We focus on the navigation system here.

Start the cartographer (assuming that the cartographer workspace is cartographer_ws):

source cartographer_ws/install_isolated/setup.bash
roslaunch cartographer_toyota_hsr hsr_2d.launch

Start the navigation with a cartographer (i.e. using a dynamic map):

source ~/nav_ws/devel/setup.bash
roslaunch navigation_start navigation_cartographer.launch

Start the task:

source ~/nav_ws/devel/setup.bash
roslaunch robot_tasks carry_my_luggage.launch

Notes

Relevant parameters can be found in the navigation launch files in ~/nav_ws/src/robot_navigation/navigation/navigation_start/launch. In specific:

Update your map names

  <arg name="prohibition_map_file"  default="$(find navigation_start)/maps/prohibition_maps/room_512/map.yaml"/>
  <arg name="static_map_file"  default="$(find navigation_start)/maps/maps/room_512/map.yaml"/>

For robot localisation, we use the original slam map from the map_server map_saver in maps/maps/. Additionally, for path planning, we edit the previous map to add prohibited and or closed areas (e.g. considering a laser-scan-based mapping, we add the unmapped table area, or, to travel between two main doors, to avoid surrounding it from the outside, we add closed edges; we do not do this with the localisation map to avoid misslocalisation errors between the real sensor reading and an edited map.)

Enable/Disable potential fields

<arg name="use_pot_fields" default="True"/>

For dynamic obstacle avoidance, we use rejective potential fields that can be enabled or disabled with this parameter.

Additionally:

<param name="pot_fields_k_rej" value="0.4"/>

this parameter indicates the obstacle's rejective force importance during navigation (too low means that the robot won't avoid obstacles and too hight means that the robot will avoid obstacles too far from it -- this two extreme cases might cause undesired behaviours).

References

[1] The human follower implementation is based on this master thesis work:

@article{becerra:2012,
author 		= {Marco Becerra-Pedraza and Jesus Savage},
title 		= {{Sistema de seguimiento de personas para un robot movil de servicio}},
journal		= {{UNAM}},
year		= {2012}
}

You can download it at the following link (click on URL: Ver Tesis).

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