文摘
The limited nature of robot sensors make many important robotics problems partially observable. These problems may require the system to perform complex information-gathering operations. One approach to solving these problems is to create plans in belief-space, the space of probability distributions over the under-lying state of the system. The belief-space plan encodes a strategy for performing a task while gaining information as necessary. Most approaches to belief-space planning rely upon representing belief state in a particular way (typically as a Gaussian). Unfortunately, this can lead to large errors between the assumed density representation of belief state and the true belief state. This paper proposes a new sample-based approach to belief-space planning that has fixed computational complexity while allowing arbitrary implementations of Bayes filtering to be used to track belief state. The approach is illustrated in the context of a simple example and compared to a prior approach. Then, we propose an application of the technique to an instance of the grasp synthesis problem where a robot must simultaneously localize and grasp an object given initially uncertain object parameters by planning information-gathering behavior. Experimental results are presented that demonstrate the approach to be capable of actively localizing and grasping boxes that are presented to the robot in uncertain and hard-to-localize configurations.