Title
Voting As Validation In Robot Programming
Abstract
This paper investigates the use of voting as a conflict-resolution technique for data analysis in robot programming. Voting represents an information-abstraction technique. It is argued that in some cases a voting approach is inherent in the nature of the data being analyzed: where multiple, independent sources of information must be reconciled to give a group decision that reflects a single outcome rather than a consensus average. This study considers an example of target classification using sonar sensors. Physical models of reflections from target primitives that are typical of the indoor environment of a mobile robot are used. Dispersed sensors take decisions on target type, which must then be fused to give the single group classification of the presence or absence and type of a target Dempster-Shafer evidential reasoning is used to assign a level of belief to each sensor decision. The decisions are then fused by two means. Using Dempster's rule of combination, conflicts are resolved through a group measure expressing dissonance in the sensor views. This evidential approach is contrasted with the resolution of sensor conflict through voting. It is demonstrated that abstraction of the level of belief through voting proves useful in resolving the straight-forward conflicts that arise in the classification problem Conflicts arise where the discriminant data value, an echo amplitude, is most sensitive to noise. Fusion helps to overcome this vulnerability: in Dempster-Shafer reasoning, through the modeling of nonparametric uncertainty and combination of belief values; and in voting, by emphasizing the majority view. The paper gives theoretical and experimental evidence for the use of voting for data abstraction and conflict resolution in areas such as classification where a strong argument can be made for techniques that emphasize a single outcome rather than an estimated value Methods for making the vote more strategic are also investigated The paper addresses the reduction of dimension of sets of decision points or decision makers. Through a consideration of combination order, queuing criteria for more strategic fusion are identified.
Year
DOI
Venue
1999
10.1177/02783649922066277
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ROBOTICS RESEARCH
Keywords
Field
DocType
voting, Dempster-Shafer theory, evidential reasoning, sonar sensing, ultrasonic transducers, multisensor data fusion, spatial placement, robot programming, target classification, learning
Voting,Sonar,Artificial intelligence,Evidential reasoning approach,Dempster–Shafer theory,Mobile robot,Mathematics,Robot programming
Journal
Volume
Issue
ISSN
18
4
0278-3649
Citations 
PageRank 
References 
8
0.59
13
Authors
3
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Simukai W. Utete1303.27
Billur Barshan231327.83
birsel ayrulu3766.54