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Apr 26, 2012

Mobile Agents: A Distributed Voice-Commanded Sensory and Robotic System for Surface EVA Assistance

Publication: Engineering, Construction, and Operations in Challenging Environments: Earth and Space 2004

Abstract

A model-based, distributed architecture integrates diverse components in a system designed for lunar and planetary surface operations: spacesuit biosensors, cameras, GPS, and a robotic assistant. The system transmits data and assists communication between the extra-vehicular activity (EVA) astronauts, the crew in a local habitat, and a remote mission support team. Software processes ("agents"), implemented in a system called Brahms, run on multiple, mobile platforms, including the spacesuit backpacks, all-terrain vehicles, and robot. These "mobile agents" interpret and transform available data to help people and robotic systems coordinate their actions to make operations more safe and efficient. Different types of agents relate platforms to each other ("proxy agents"), devices to software ("comm agents"), and people to the system ("personal agents"). A state-of-the-art spoken dialogue interface enables people to communicate with their personal agents, supporting a speech-driven navigation and scheduling tool, field observation record, and rover command system. An important aspects of the engineering methodology engineering involves first simulating the entire hardware and software system in Brahms, and then configuring the agents into a runtime system. Design of mobile agent functionality has been. based on ethnographic observation of scientists working in Mars analog settings in the High Canadian Arctic on Devon Island and the southeast Utah desert. The Mobile Agents system is developed iteratively in the context of use, with people doing authentic work. This paper provides a brief introduction to the architecture and emphasizes the method of empirical requirements analysis, through which observation, modeling, design, and testing are integrated in simulated EVA operations.

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Go to Engineering, Construction, and Operations in Challenging Environments
Engineering, Construction, and Operations in Challenging Environments: Earth and Space 2004
Pages: 85 - 92

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Published online: Apr 26, 2012

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William J. Clancey
NASA/Ames Research Center, Computational Science Division, MS 269-3, Moffett Field, CA 94035; Institute for Human and Machine Cognition, UWF, Pensacola, FL
Maarten Sierhuis
NASA/Ames Research Center (Sierhuis & Dowding: RIACS; van Hoof: QSS)
Rick Alena
NASA/Ames Research Center (Sierhuis & Dowding: RIACS; van Hoof: QSS)
Sekou Crawford
Stanford University, Department of Mechanical Engineering, Stanford, CA
John Dowding
NASA/Ames Research Center (Sierhuis & Dowding: RIACS; van Hoof: QSS)
Jeff Graham
NASA/Johnson Space Center, Houston, TX (Graham: Titan, Inc.)
Charis Kaskiris
University of California, School of Information Management and Systems, Berkeley, CA
Kim S. Tyree
NASA/Johnson Space Center, Houston, TX (Graham: Titan, Inc.)
Ronnie van Hoof
NASA/Ames Research Center (Sierhuis & Dowding: RIACS; van Hoof: QSS)

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