This collection includes most of the ASU Theses and Dissertations from 2011 to present. ASU Theses and Dissertations are available in downloadable PDF format; however, a small percentage of items are under embargo. Information about the dissertations/theses includes degree information, committee members, an abstract, supporting data or media.

In addition to the electronic theses found in the ASU Digital Repository, ASU Theses and Dissertations can be found in the ASU Library Catalog.

Dissertations and Theses granted by Arizona State University are archived and made available through a joint effort of the ASU Graduate College and the ASU Libraries. For more information or questions about this collection contact or visit the Digital Repository ETD Library Guide or contact the ASU Graduate College at gradformat@asu.edu.

Displaying 21 - 30 of 64
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Description
In this thesis work, a novel learning approach to solving the problem of controllinga quadcopter (drone) swarm is explored. To deal with large sizes, swarm control is often achieved in a distributed fashion by combining different behaviors such that each behavior implements some desired swarm characteristics, such as avoiding ob- stacles and staying

In this thesis work, a novel learning approach to solving the problem of controllinga quadcopter (drone) swarm is explored. To deal with large sizes, swarm control is often achieved in a distributed fashion by combining different behaviors such that each behavior implements some desired swarm characteristics, such as avoiding ob- stacles and staying close to neighbors. One common approach in distributed swarm control uses potential fields. A limitation of this approach is that the potential fields often depend statically on a set of control parameters that are manually specified a priori. This paper introduces Dynamic Potential Fields for flexible swarm control. These potential fields are modulated by a set of dynamic control parameters (DCPs) that can change under different environment situations. Since the focus is only on these DCPs, it simplifies the learning problem and makes it feasible for practical use. This approach uses soft actor critic (SAC) where the actor only determines how to modify DCPs in the current situation, resulting in more flexible swarm control. In the results, this work will show that the DCP approach allows for the drones to bet- ter traverse environments with obstacles compared to several state-of-the-art swarm control methods with a fixed set of control parameters. This approach also obtained a higher safety score commonly used to assess swarm behavior. A basic reinforce- ment learning approach is compared to demonstrate faster convergence. Finally, an ablation study is conducted to validate the design of this approach.
ContributorsFerraro, Calvin Shores (Author) / Zhang, Yu (Thesis advisor) / Ben Amor, Hani (Committee member) / Berman, Spring (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2022
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Description
Despite the rapid adoption of robotics and machine learning in industry, their application to scientific studies remains under-explored. Combining industry-driven advances with scientific exploration provides new perspectives and a greater understanding of the planet and its environmental processes. Focusing on rock detection, mapping, and dynamics analysis, I present technical approaches

Despite the rapid adoption of robotics and machine learning in industry, their application to scientific studies remains under-explored. Combining industry-driven advances with scientific exploration provides new perspectives and a greater understanding of the planet and its environmental processes. Focusing on rock detection, mapping, and dynamics analysis, I present technical approaches and scientific results of developing robotics and machine learning technologies for geomorphology and seismic hazard analysis. I demonstrate an interdisciplinary research direction to push the frontiers of both robotics and geosciences, with potential translational contributions to commercial applications for hazard monitoring and prospecting. To understand the effects of rocky fault scarp development on rock trait distributions, I present a data-processing pipeline that utilizes unpiloted aerial vehicles (UAVs) and deep learning to segment densely distributed rocks in several orders of magnitude. Quantification and correlation analysis of rock trait distributions demonstrate a statistical approach for geomorphology studies. Fragile geological features such as precariously balanced rocks (PBRs) provide upper-bound ground motion constraints for hazard analysis. I develop an offboard method and onboard method as complementary to each other for PBR searching and mapping. Using deep learning, the offboard method segments PBRs in point clouds reconstructed from UAV surveys. The onboard method equips a UAV with edge-computing devices and stereo cameras, enabling onboard machine learning for real-time PBR search, detection, and mapping during surveillance. The offboard method provides an efficient solution to find PBR candidates in existing point clouds, which is useful for field reconnaissance. The onboard method emphasizes mapping individual PBRs for their complete visible surface features, such as basal contacts with pedestals–critical geometry to analyze fragility. After PBRs are mapped, I investigate PBR dynamics by building a virtual shake robot (VSR) that simulates ground motions to test PBR overturning. The VSR demonstrates that ground motion directions and niches are important factors determining PBR fragility, which were rarely considered in previous studies. The VSR also enables PBR large-displacement studies by tracking a toppled-PBR trajectory, presenting novel methods of rockfall hazard zoning. I build a real mini shake robot providing a reverse method to validate simulation experiments in the VSR.
ContributorsChen, Zhiang (Author) / Arrowsmith, Ramon (Thesis advisor) / Das, Jnaneshwar (Thesis advisor) / Bell, James (Committee member) / Berman, Spring (Committee member) / Christensen, Philip (Committee member) / Whipple, Kelin (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2022
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Description
For a system of autonomous vehicles functioning together in a traffic scene, 3Dunderstanding of participants in the field of view or surrounding is very essential for assessing the safety operation of the involved. This problem can be decomposed into online pose and shape estimation, which has been a core research area of

For a system of autonomous vehicles functioning together in a traffic scene, 3Dunderstanding of participants in the field of view or surrounding is very essential for assessing the safety operation of the involved. This problem can be decomposed into online pose and shape estimation, which has been a core research area of computer vision for over a decade now. This work is an add-on to support and improve the joint estimate of the pose and shape of vehicles from monocular cameras. The objective of jointly estimating the vehicle pose and shape online is enabled by what is called an offline reconstruction pipeline. In the offline reconstruction step, an approach to obtain the vehicle 3D shape with keypoints labeled is formulated. This work proposes a multi-view reconstruction pipeline using images and masks which can create an approximate shape of vehicles and can be used as a shape prior. Then a 3D model-fitting optimization approach to refine the shape prior using high quality computer-aided design (CAD) models of vehicles is developed. A dataset of such 3D vehicles with 20 keypoints annotated is prepared and call it the AvaCAR dataset. The AvaCAR dataset can be used to estimate the vehicle shape and pose, without having the need to collect significant amounts of data needed for adequate training of a neural network. The online reconstruction can use this synthesis dataset to generate novel viewpoints and simultaneously train a neural network for pose and shape estimation. Most methods in the current literature using deep neural networks, that are trained to estimate pose of the object from a single image, are inherently biased to the viewpoint of the images used. This approach aims at addressing these existing limitations in the current method by delivering the online estimation a shape prior which can generate novel views to account for the bias due to viewpoint. The dataset is provided with ground truth extrinsic parameters and the compact vector based shape representations which along with the multi-view dataset can be used to efficiently trained neural networks for vehicle pose and shape estimation. The vehicles in this library are evaluated with some standard metrics to assure they are capable of aiding online estimation and model based tracking.
ContributorsDUTTA, PRABAL BIJOY (Author) / Yang, Yezhou (Thesis advisor) / Berman, Spring (Committee member) / Lu, Duo (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2022
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Description
This work has improved the quality of the solution to the sparse rewards problemby combining reinforcement learning (RL) with knowledge-rich planning. Classical methods for coping with sparse rewards during reinforcement learning modify the reward landscape so as to better guide the learner. In contrast, this work combines RL with a planner in order

This work has improved the quality of the solution to the sparse rewards problemby combining reinforcement learning (RL) with knowledge-rich planning. Classical methods for coping with sparse rewards during reinforcement learning modify the reward landscape so as to better guide the learner. In contrast, this work combines RL with a planner in order to utilize other information about the environment. As the scope for representing environmental information is limited in RL, this work has conflated a model-free learning algorithm – temporal difference (TD) learning – with a Hierarchical Task Network (HTN) planner to accommodate rich environmental information in the algorithm. In the perpetual sparse rewards problem, rewards reemerge after being collected within a fixed interval of time, culminating in a lack of a well-defined goal state as an exit condition to the problem. Incorporating planning in the learning algorithm not only improves the quality of the solution, but the algorithm also avoids the ambiguity of incorporating a goal of maximizing profit while using only a planning algorithm to solve this problem. Upon occasionally using the HTN planner, this algorithm provides the necessary tweak toward the optimal solution. In this work, I have demonstrated an on-policy algorithm that has improved the quality of the solution over vanilla reinforcement learning. The objective of this work has been to observe the capacity of the synthesized algorithm in finding optimal policies to maximize rewards, awareness of the environment, and the awareness of the presence of other agents in the vicinity.
ContributorsNandan, Swastik (Author) / Pavlic, Theodore (Thesis advisor) / Das, Jnaneshwar (Thesis advisor) / Berman, Spring (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2022
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Description
Navigation and mapping in GPS-denied environments, such as coal mines ordilapidated buildings filled with smog or particulate matter, pose a significant challenge due to the limitations of conventional LiDAR or vision systems. Therefore there exists a need for a navigation algorithm and mapping strategy which do not use vision systems but are still

Navigation and mapping in GPS-denied environments, such as coal mines ordilapidated buildings filled with smog or particulate matter, pose a significant challenge due to the limitations of conventional LiDAR or vision systems. Therefore there exists a need for a navigation algorithm and mapping strategy which do not use vision systems but are still able to explore and map the environment. The map can further be used by first responders and cave explorers to access the environments. This thesis presents the design of a collision-resilient Unmanned Aerial Vehicle (UAV), XPLORER that utilizes a novel navigation algorithm for exploration and simultaneous mapping of the environment. The real-time navigation algorithm uses the onboard Inertial Measurement Units (IMUs) and arm bending angles for contact estimation and employs an Explore and Exploit strategy. Additionally, the quadrotor design is discussed, highlighting its improved stability over the previous design. The generated map of the environment can be utilized by autonomous vehicles to navigate the environment. The navigation algorithm is validated in multiple real-time experiments in different scenarios consisting of concave and convex corners and circular objects. Furthermore, the developed mapping framework can serve as an auxiliary input for map generation along with conventional LiDAR or vision-based mapping algorithms. Both the navigation and mapping algorithms are designed to be modular, making them compatible with conventional UAVs also. This research contributes to the development of navigation and mapping techniques for GPS-denied environments, enabling safer and more efficient exploration of challenging territories.
ContributorsPandian Saravanakumaran, Aravind Adhith (Author) / Zhang, Wenlong (Thesis advisor) / Das, Jnaneshwar (Committee member) / Berman, Spring (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2023
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Description
This dissertation introduces and examines Soft Curved Reconfigurable Anisotropic Mechanisms (SCRAMs) as a solution to address actuation, manufacturing, and modeling challenges in the field of soft robotics, with the aim of facilitating the broader implementation of soft robots in various industries. SCRAM systems utilize the curved geometry of thin elastic

This dissertation introduces and examines Soft Curved Reconfigurable Anisotropic Mechanisms (SCRAMs) as a solution to address actuation, manufacturing, and modeling challenges in the field of soft robotics, with the aim of facilitating the broader implementation of soft robots in various industries. SCRAM systems utilize the curved geometry of thin elastic structures to tackle these challenges in soft robots. SCRAM devices can modify their dynamic behavior by incorporating reconfigurable anisotropic stiffness, thereby enabling tailored locomotion patterns for specific tasks. This approach simplifies the actuation of robots, resulting in lighter, more flexible, cost-effective, and safer soft robotic systems. This dissertation demonstrates the potential of SCRAM devices through several case studies. These studies investigate virtual joints and shape change propagation in tubes, as well as anisotropic dynamic behavior in vibrational soft twisted beams, effectively demonstrating interesting locomotion patterns that are achievable using simple actuation mechanisms. The dissertation also addresses modeling and simulation challenges by introducing a reduced-order modeling approach. This approach enables fast and accurate simulations of soft robots and is compatible with existing rigid body simulators. Additionally, this dissertation investigates the prototyping processes of SCRAM devices and offers a comprehensive framework for the development of these devices. Overall, this dissertation demonstrates the potential of SCRAM devices to overcome actuation, modeling, and manufacturing challenges in soft robotics. The innovative concepts and approaches presented have implications for various industries that require cost-effective, adaptable, and safe robotic systems. SCRAM devices pave the way for the widespread application of soft robots in diverse domains.
ContributorsJiang, Yuhao (Author) / Aukes, Daniel (Thesis advisor) / Berman, Spring (Committee member) / Lee, Hyunglae (Committee member) / Marvi, Hamidreza (Committee member) / Srivastava, Siddharth (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2023
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Description
Ferrofluidic microrobots have emerged as promising tools for minimally invasive medical procedures, leveraging their unique properties to navigate through complex fluids and reach otherwise inaccessible regions of the human body, thereby enabling new applications in areas such as targeted drug delivery, tissue engineering, and diagnostics. This dissertation develops a

Ferrofluidic microrobots have emerged as promising tools for minimally invasive medical procedures, leveraging their unique properties to navigate through complex fluids and reach otherwise inaccessible regions of the human body, thereby enabling new applications in areas such as targeted drug delivery, tissue engineering, and diagnostics. This dissertation develops a model-predictive controller for the external magnetic manipulation of ferrofluid microrobots. Several experiments are performed to illustrate the adaptability and generalizability of the control algorithm to changes in system parameters, including the three-dimensional reference trajectory, the velocity of the workspace fluid, and the size, orientation, deformation, and velocity of the microrobotic droplet. A linear time-invariant control system governing the dynamics of locomotion is derived and used as the constraints of a least squares optimal control algorithm to minimize the projected error between the actual trajectory and the desired trajectory of the microrobot. The optimal control problem is implemented after time discretization using quadratic programming. In addition to demonstrating generalizability and adaptability, the accuracy of the control algorithm is analyzed for several different types of experiments. The experiments are performed in a workspace with a static surrounding fluid and extended to a workspace with fluid flowing through it. The results suggest that the proposed control algorithm could enable new capabilities for ferrofluidic microrobots, opening up new opportunities for applications in minimally invasive medical procedures, lab-on-a-chip, and microfluidics.
ContributorsSkowronek, Elizabeth Olga (Author) / Marvi, Hamidreza (Thesis advisor) / Berman, Spring (Committee member) / Platte, Rodrigo (Committee member) / Xu, Zhe (Committee member) / Lee, Hyunglae (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2023
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Description
This thesis presents a study on the user adaptive variable impedance control of a wearable ankle robot for robot-aided rehabilitation with a primary focus on enhancing accuracy and speed. The controller adjusts the impedance parameters based on the user's kinematic data to provide personalized assistance. Bayesian optimization is employed to

This thesis presents a study on the user adaptive variable impedance control of a wearable ankle robot for robot-aided rehabilitation with a primary focus on enhancing accuracy and speed. The controller adjusts the impedance parameters based on the user's kinematic data to provide personalized assistance. Bayesian optimization is employed to minimize an objective function formulated from the user's kinematic data to adapt the impedance parameters per user, thereby enhancing speed and accuracy. Gaussian process is used as a surrogate model for optimization to account for uncertainties and outliers inherent to human experiments. Student-t process based outlier detection is utilized to enhance optimization robustness and accuracy. The efficacy of the optimization is evaluated based on measures of speed, accuracy, and effort, and compared with an untuned variable impedance controller during 2D curved trajectory following tasks. User effort was measured based on muscle activation data from the tibialis anterior, peroneus longus, soleus, and gastrocnemius muscles. The optimized controller was evaluated on 15 healthy subjects and demonstrated an average increase in speed of 9.85% and a decrease in deviation from the ideal trajectory of 7.57%, compared to an unoptimized variable impedance controller. The strategy also reduced the time to complete tasks by 6.57%, while maintaining a similar level of user effort.
ContributorsManoharan, Gautham (Author) / Lee, Hyunglae (Thesis advisor) / Berman, Spring (Committee member) / Xu, Zhe (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2023
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Description
In this work, I propose to bridge the gap between human users and adaptive control of robotic systems. The goal is to enable robots to consider user feedback and adjust their behaviors. A critical challenge with designing such systems is that users are often non-experts, with limited knowledge about

In this work, I propose to bridge the gap between human users and adaptive control of robotic systems. The goal is to enable robots to consider user feedback and adjust their behaviors. A critical challenge with designing such systems is that users are often non-experts, with limited knowledge about the robot's hardware and dynamics. In the domain of human-robot interaction, there exist different modalities of conveying information regarding the desired behavior of the robot, most commonly used are demonstrations, and preferences. While it is challenging for non-experts to provide demonstrations of robot behavior, works that consider preferences expressed as trajectory rankings lead to users providing noisy and possibly conflicting information, leading to slow adaptation or system failures. The end user can be expected to be familiar with the dynamics and how they relate to their desired objectives through repeated interactions with the system. However, due to inadequate knowledge about the system dynamics, it is expected that the user would find it challenging to provide feedback on all dimension's of the system's behavior at all times. Thus, the key innovation of this work is to enable users to provide partial instead of completely specified preferences as with traditional methods that learn from user preferences. In particular, I consider partial preferences in the form of preferences over plant dynamic parameters, for which I propose Adaptive User Control (AUC) of robotic systems. I leverage the correlations between the observed and hidden parameter preferences to deal with incompleteness. I use a sparse Gaussian Process Latent Variable Model formulation to learn hidden variables that represent the relationships between the observed and hidden preferences over the system parameters. This model is trained using Stochastic Variational Inference with a distributed loss formulation. I evaluate AUC in a custom drone-swarm environment and several domains from DeepMind control suite. I compare AUC with the state-of-the-art preference-based reinforcement learning methods that are utilized with user preferences. Results show that AUC outperforms the baselines substantially in terms of sample and feedback complexity.
ContributorsBiswas, Upasana (Author) / Zhang, Yu (Thesis advisor) / Kambhampati, Subbarao (Committee member) / Berman, Spring (Committee member) / Liu, Lantao (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2023
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Description
Currently, one of the biggest limiting factors for long-term deployment of autonomous systems is the power constraints of a platform. In particular, for aerial robots such as unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs), the energy resource is the main driver of mission planning and operation definitions, as everything revolved around flight time.

Currently, one of the biggest limiting factors for long-term deployment of autonomous systems is the power constraints of a platform. In particular, for aerial robots such as unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs), the energy resource is the main driver of mission planning and operation definitions, as everything revolved around flight time. The focus of this work is to develop a new method of energy storage and charging for autonomous UAV systems, for use during long-term deployments in a constrained environment. We developed a charging solution that allows pre-equipped UAV system to land on top of designated charging pads and rapidly replenish their battery reserves, using a contact charging point. This system is designed to work with all types of rechargeable batteries, focusing on Lithium Polymer (LiPo) packs, that incorporate a battery management system for increased reliability. The project also explores optimization methods for fleets of UAV systems, to increase charging efficiency and extend battery lifespans. Each component of this project was first designed and tested in computer simulation. Following positive feedback and results, prototypes for each part of this system were developed and rigorously tested. Results show that the contact charging method is able to charge LiPo batteries at a 1-C rate, which is the industry standard rate, maintaining the same safety and efficiency standards as modern day direct connection chargers. Control software for these base stations was also created, to be integrated with a fleet management system, and optimizes UAV charge levels and distribution to extend LiPo battery lifetimes while still meeting expected mission demand. Each component of this project (hardware/software) was designed for manufacturing and implementation using industry standard tools, making it ideal for large-scale implementations. This system has been successfully tested with a fleet of UAV systems at Arizona State University, and is currently being integrated into an Arizona smart city environment for deployment.
ContributorsMian, Sami (Author) / Panchanathan, Sethuraman (Thesis advisor) / Berman, Spring (Committee member) / Yang, Yezhou (Committee member) / McDaniel, Troy (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2018