Accelerating Search-Based Planning for Multi-Robot Manipulation by Leveraging Online-Generated Experiences

(Best Student Paper)

Yorai Shaoul*, Itamar Mishani*, Maxim Likhachev, Jiaoyang Li.

International Conference on Automated Planning and Scheduling (ICAPS), pages 523-531, 2024.

Publisher arXiv

An exciting frontier in robotic manipulation is the use of multiple arms at once. However, planning concurrent motions is a challenging task using current methods. The high-dimensional composite state space renders many well-known motion planning algorithms intractable. Recently, Multi-Agent Path-Finding (MAPF) algorithms have shown promise in discrete 2D domains, providing rigorous guarantees. However, widely used conflict-based methods in MAPF assume an efficient single-agent motion planner. This poses challenges in adapting them to manipulation cases where this assumption does not hold, due to the high dimensionality of configuration spaces and the computational bottlenecks associated with collision checking. To this end, we propose an approach for accelerating conflict-based search algorithms by leveraging their repetitive and incremental nature – making them tractable for use in complex scenarios involving multi-arm coordination in obstacle-laden environments. We show that our method preserves completeness and bounded sub-optimality guarantees, and demonstrate its practical efficacy through a set of experiments with up to 10 robotic arms.

@inproceedings{ ShaoulICAPS24,
  author    = "Yorai Shaoul and Itamar Mishani and Maxim Likhachev and Jiaoyang Li",
  title     = "Accelerating Search-Based Planning for Multi-Robot Manipulation by Leveraging Online-Generated Experiences",
  booktitle = "Proceedings of the International Conference on Automated Planning and Scheduling (ICAPS)",
  pages     = "523-531",
  year      = "2024",
  doi       = "10.1609/icaps.v34i1.31513",
}

Abstract:

An exciting frontier in robotic manipulation is the use of multiple arms at once. However, planning concurrent motions is a challenging task using current methods. The high-dimensional composite state space renders many well-known motion planning algorithms intractable. Recently, Multi-Agent Path-Finding (MAPF) algorithms have shown promise in discrete 2D domains, providing rigorous guarantees. However, widely used conflict-based methods in MAPF assume an efficient single-agent motion planner. This poses challenges in adapting them to manipulation cases where this assumption does not hold, due to the high dimensionality of configuration spaces and the computational bottlenecks associated with collision checking. To this end, we propose an approach for accelerating conflict-based search algorithms by leveraging their repetitive and incremental nature – making them tractable for use in complex scenarios involving multi-arm coordination in obstacle-laden environments. We show that our method preserves completeness and bounded sub-optimality guarantees, and demonstrate its practical efficacy through a set of experiments with up to 10 robotic arms.