Indian-origin scientist develops new type of robotic brain

Advertisement
By Press Trust of India | Updated: 1 October 2013 13:46 IST
Indian-origin scientist develops new type of robotic brain
An Indian-origin scientist in US has developed a new feedback system that allows robots to operate with minimal supervision and could eventually lead to autonomous machines.

The system may lead to robots that think for themselves, learn, adapt and use active critique to work unsupervised.

Developed by Dr Jagannathan Sarangapani, from Missouri University of Science and Technology, the system makes use of current formation moving robots and introduces a fault-tolerant control design to improve the probability of completing a set task.

The new feedback system will allow a "follower" robot to take over as the "leader" robot if the original leader has a system or mechanical failure.

In a leader/follower formation, the lead robot is controlled through a nonholonomic system, meaning that the trajectory is set in advance, and the followers are tracing the same pattern that the leader takes by using sonar.

Advertisement

When a problem occurs and roles need to change to continue, the fault tolerant control system comes into use.

It uses reinforcement learning and active critique, both inspired by behaviourist psychology to show how machines act in environments to maximise work rate, to help the new, unmanned robot to estimate its new course.

Advertisement

Without this, the follower wouldn't have a path to follow and the task would fail.

"Imagine you have one operator in an office controlling 10 bulldozers remotely," said Sarangapani, the William A Rutledge - Emerson Electric Co Distinguished Professor in Electrical Engineering at S&T.

Advertisement

"In the event that the lead one suffers a mechanical problem, this hardware allows the work to continue," said Sarangapani.

The innovative research can be applied to robotic security surveillance, mining and even aerial manoeuvring.

Sarangapani believes that the research is most important for aerial vehicles. When a helicopter is in flight, faults can now be detected and accommodated.

This means that instead of a catastrophic failure resulting in a potentially fatal crash, the system can allow for a better chance for an emergency landing instead.

The fault tolerance would notice a problem and essentially shut down that malfunctioning part while maintaining slight control of the overall vehicle.

"The end goal is to push robotics to the next level," said Sarangapani.

"I want robots to think for themselves, to learn, adapt and use active critique to work unsupervised. A self-aware robot will eventually be here, it is just a matter of time, he said.

 

For the latest tech news and reviews, follow Gadgets 360 on X, Facebook, WhatsApp, Threads and Google News. For the latest videos on gadgets and tech, subscribe to our YouTube channel. If you want to know everything about top influencers, follow our in-house Who'sThat360 on Instagram and YouTube.

Advertisement
Popular Mobile Brands
  1. Upcoming Phones in July: Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 7, OnePlus Nord 5, More
  2. Oppo Reno 14F 5G With 6,000mAh Battery Launched: Price, Specifications
  3. WhatsApp Can Now Summarise Unread Messages for You Using Meta AI
  4. BSNL Launches Portal for Doorstep Delivery of SIM Cards
  5. Nothing Phone 3 Surfaces on Geekbench Ahead of Launch on July 1
  6. Vivo X Fold 5 With Snapdragon 8 Gen 3 SoC, 6,000mAh Battery Launched
  7. Nvidia's RTX 5050 GPU for Desktops, Laptops Launched: See Price
  8. Honor X9c With 108-Megapixel Camera, Curved Display Set to Launch in India
  1. Google's Pixel 10 Tipped to Pack Larger Battery Than Pixel 9; May Offer Faster Charging
  2. Motorola Teases Upcoming Smartphone Launch in India, Could Be the Moto G96 5G
  3. Nothing Phone 3 With Snapdragon 8s Gen 4 SoC Surfaces on Geekbench Ahead of Launch
  4. WhatsApp Introduces Meta AI-Powered Message Summaries to Catch Up on Unread Messages
  5. NASA and ISRO Confirm Japan’s Moon Lander Resilience Crashed at Mare Frigoris
  6. Supermassive Black Hole Burps Matter at Near-Light Speeds After Consuming Gas Too Fast
  7. Amazon's Kuiper Launches 27 Satellites, Eyes 2025 LEO Broadband Rollout
  8. Soviet Venus Probe Kosmos-482 Re-enters Earth’s Atmosphere After 52 Years, Location Unclear
  9. Vera C. Rubin Observatory Unveils First Images, Hints at Universe’s Dynamic Secrets Ahead
  10. The Family Man Season 3 OTT Release Teased: What You Need to Know
Gadgets 360 is available in
Download Our Apps
Available in Hindi
© Copyright Red Pixels Ventures Limited 2025. All rights reserved.