Title
Network Characterization of Lattice-Based Modular Robots with Neighbor-to-Neighbor Communications
Abstract
Modular robots form autonomous distributed systems in which modules use communications to coordinate their activities in order to achieve common goals. The complexity of distributed algorithms is generally expressed as a function of network properties, e.g., the number of nodes, the number of links and the radius/diameter of the system. In this paper, we characterize the networks of some lattice-based modular robots which use only neighbor-to-neighbor communications. We demonstrate that they form sparse and large-diameter networks. Additionally, we provide tight bounds for the radius and the diameter of these networks. We also show that, because of the huge diameter and the huge average distance of massive-scale lattice-based networks, complex distributed algorithms for programmable matter pose a significant design challenge. Indeed, communications over a large number of hops cause, for instance, latency and reliability issues.
Year
DOI
Venue
2016
10.1007/978-3-319-73008-0_29
Springer Proceedings in Advanced Robotics
Field
DocType
Volume
Lattice (order),Latency (engineering),Computer science,Distributed algorithm,Self-reconfiguring modular robot,Programmable matter,Distributed computing
Conference
6
ISSN
Citations 
PageRank 
2511-1256
0
0.34
References 
Authors
0
5
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
André Naz132.07
Piranda Benoit23811.22
Thadeu Tucci311.03
Seth Copen Goldstein41951232.71
Bourgeois Julien540363.53