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What is Behaviour-Based Robotics (BBR)

Encyclopedia of Artificial Intelligence
A paradigm initiated by Brooks (1999) that stressed the importance of studying robots situated in the world, and responding to information directly gathered by their sensors. BBR robots make minimal use of internal representations.
Published in Chapter:
Swarm Robotics
Amanda J.C. Sharkey (University of Sheffield, UK)
Copyright: © 2009 |Pages: 6
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-59904-849-9.ch225
Abstract
Swarm Robotics is a biologically inspired approach to the organisation and control of groups of robots. Its biological inspiration is mainly drawn from social insects, but also from herding and flocking phenomena in mammals and fish. The promise of emulating some of the efficient organisational principles of biological swarms is an alluring one. In biological systems such as colonies of ants, sophisticated cooperative behaviour emerges despite the simplicity of the individual members, and the absence of centralised control and explicit directions. Such societies are able to maintain themselves as a collective, and to accomplish coordinated actions such as those required to construct and maintain nests, to find food, and to raise their young. The central idea behind swarm robotics is to find similar ways of coordinating and controlling collections of robots.
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