Paper
12 May 2006 Artificial spider: eight-legged arachnid and autonomous learning of locomotion
Nabil I. Alshurafa, Justin T. Harmon
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
Evolution has produced organisms whose locomotive agility and adaptivity mock the difficulty faced by robotic scientists. The problem of locomotion, which nature has solved so well, is surprisingly complex and difficult. We explore the ability of an artificial eight-legged arachnid, or animat, to autonomously learn a locomotive gait in a three-dimensional environment. We take a physics-based approach at modeling the world and the virtual body of the animat. The arachnid-like animat learns muscular control functions using simulated annealing techniques, which attempts to maximize forward velocity and minimize energy expenditure. We experiment with varying the weight of these parameters and the resulting locomotive gaits. We perform two experiments in which the first is a naive physics model of the body and world which uses point-masses and idealized joints and muscles. The second experiment is a more realistic simulation using rigid body elements with distributed mass, friction, motors, and mechanical joints. By emphasizing physical aspects we wish to minimize, a number of interesting gaits emerge.
© (2006) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Nabil I. Alshurafa and Justin T. Harmon "Artificial spider: eight-legged arachnid and autonomous learning of locomotion", Proc. SPIE 6230, Unmanned Systems Technology VIII, 62301E (12 May 2006); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.666491
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Cited by 2 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Gait analysis

Physics

3D modeling

Algorithms

Systems modeling

Annealing

Clocks

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