News 2015: UMass Dartmouth professor's research helps improve teamwork of unmanned underwater vehicles (UUV)

News 2015: UMass Dartmouth professor's research helps improve teamwork of unmanned underwater vehicles (UUV)
UMass Dartmouth professor's research helps improve teamwork of unmanned underwater vehicles (UUV)

Office of Naval Research awards Engineering Professor Ramprasad Balasubramanian $225,000 grant to address communication challenges in achieving multi-UUV autonomy

Professor of Computer Science and Associate Dean of UMass Dartmouth's College of Engineering Dr. Ramprasad Balasubramanian has earned a $225,000 grant from the Office of Naval Research to address communication challenges of unmanned underwater vehicles (UUVs).

"For a team of vehicles to operate autonomously in a coordinated manner, robust communication is needed through a consistent exchange of messages," said Dr. Balasubramanian. "The underwater environment presents many challenges for communication. When communication is unreliable or severely restricted we need to find other mechanisms by which a team can operate effectively."

"The missions of these UUV teams are in many cases goal oriented. However, a particular goal of the team or even a single vehicle may change, requiring dynamic re-tasking in order to maintain the original mission, while accomplishing newly discovered tasks."

Dynamic re-tasking will lead to vehicles abandoning their previous roles and assuming new ones. This may require vehicle or team of vehicles to break away from the pack. This is based on situational awareness in which a vehicle merges its own sensor data with the overall team knowledge.

"Situational awareness enables a vehicle to process and understand conclusions that it would not normally be able come to on its own," said Dr. Balasubramanian. "This will allow UUVs to make changes to their current task in a more intelligent manner. But if the role reassignment is done in an ad hoc fashion the original mission could be severely compromised. "

When one or more vehicles make changes to their task, task consensus needs to be reestablished. Task consensus is achieved when every vehicle in the team is aware of its own task as well as all other tasks of its team members.

This work is being performed in collaboration with researchers from the Naval Undersea Warfare Center (NUWC) at Newport, Rhode Island.

UMass Dartmouth distinguishes itself as a vibrant, public research university dedicated to engaged learning and innovative research resulting in personal and lifelong student success. The University serves as an intellectual catalyst for economic, social, and cultural transformation on a global, national, and regional scale.

 

For more details about Prof. Ramprasad Balasubramanian, click here.