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Proceedings ArticleDOI

A combinatorial approach to planar non-colliding robot arm motion planning

Ileana Streinu
- pp 443-453
TLDR
A combinatorial approach to plan noncolliding motions for a polygonal bar-and-joint framework based on a novel class of one-degree-of-freedom mechanisms induced by pseudo triangulations of planar point sets that yields very efficient deterministic algorithms for a category of robot arm motion planning problems with many degrees of freedom.
Abstract
We propose a combinatorial approach to plan noncolliding motions for a polygonal bar-and-joint framework. Our approach yields very efficient deterministic algorithms for a category of robot arm motion planning problems with many degrees of freedom, where the known general roadmap techniques would give exponential complexity. It is based on a novel class of one-degree-of-freedom mechanisms induced by pseudo triangulations of planar point sets, for which we provide several equivalent characterization and exhibit rich combinatorial and rigidity theoretic properties. The main application is an efficient algorithm for the Carpenter's rule problem: convexify a simple bar-and-joint planar polygonal linkage using only non self-intersecting planar motions. A step in the convexification motion consists in moving a pseudo-triangulation-based mechanism along its unique trajectory in configuration space until two adjacent edges align. At that point, a local alteration restores the pseudo triangulation. The motion continues for O(n/sup 2/) steps until all the points are in convex position.

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Citations
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References
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The complexity of robot motion planning

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Journal ArticleDOI

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TL;DR: In this paper, a decision method for finding a continuous motion connecting two given positions and orientations of the whole collection of bodies is presented. But it is not shown that this problem can be solved in polynomial time.
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TL;DR: This handbook should be useful for mathematicians working in other areas, as well as for econometrists, computer scientists, crystallographers, physicists and engineers who are looking for geometric tools for their own work.
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