Author:
Kumari Nisha,Lee Kevin,Barca Jan Carlo,Ranaweera Chathurika
Abstract
AbstractDrone swarms consist of multiple drones that can achieve tasks that individual drones can not, such as search and recovery or surveillance over a large area. A swarm’s internal structure typically consists of multiple drones operating autonomously. Reliable detection and tracking of swarms and individual drones allow a greater understanding of the behaviour and movement of a swarm. Increased understanding of drone behaviour allows better coordination, collision avoidance, and performance monitoring of individual drones in the swarm. The research presented in this paper proposes a deep learning-based approach for reliable detection and tracking of individual drones within a swarm using stereo-vision cameras in real time. The motivation behind this research is in the need to gain a deeper understanding of swarm dynamics, enabling improved coordination, collision avoidance, and performance monitoring of individual drones within a swarm. The proposed solution provides a precise tracking system and considers the highly dense and dynamic behaviour of drones. The approach is evaluated in both sparse and dense networks in a variety of configurations. The accuracy and efficiency of the proposed solution have been analysed by implementing a series of comparative experiments that demonstrate reasonable accuracy in detecting and tracking drones within a swarm.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Reference76 articles.
1. Navarro, I., Matia, F.: An introduction to gswarm robotics. Int Scholarly Res Notices 2013 (2013)
2. Khaldi, B., Cherif, F.: An overview of swarm robotics: Swarm intelligence applied to multi-robotics. Int J Comput Appl 126(2), 31–37 (2015)
3. Saha, H.N., Das, N.K., Pal, S.K., Basu, S., Auddy, S., Dey, R., Nandy, A., Pal, D., Roy, N., Mitra, D., et al.: A cloud based autonomous multipurpose system with self-communicating bots and swarm of drones. In: 2018 IEEE Annual Computing and Communication Workshop and Conference (CCWC), pp. 649–653 (2018)
4. Wang, X., Green, D., Barca, J.C.: Guidelines for improving the robustness of swarm robotic systems through adjustment of network topology. In: 2017 IEEE International Conference on Advanced Intelligent Mechatronics (AIM), pp. 1399–1405 (2017)
5. Sparrow, R.J.: Killer robots: Ethical issues in the design of unmanned systems for military applications. In: Handbook of Unmanned Aerial Vehicles, pp. 2965–2983 (2015)
Cited by
1 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献