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Essay / Swarm Robotics - 3098
Humans can bond together to accomplish a specific mission, working as a team and breaking the mission down into smaller, distinct tasks. Contemporary robot fleets fail to the extent that they require external instruction to accomplish a mission because this assumes predictability of decision points during task execution. Swarm robotics aspires to equip traditional mobile robotics with the ability to accomplish complex missions successfully and with minimal dependence on external authority for task delegation. Swarm Intelligence: the precursor to Swarm RoboticsSwarm Intelligence is “artificial intelligence based on the collective behavior of decentralized individual-organized systems. [1] Although the contribution of an individual member may be minimal, the combination of the efforts of many members results in an "emerging behavioral pattern with a powerful ability to solve problems in a dynamic environment." [2] Such systems generally include a plurality of autonomous agents that interact locally with each other and with their environment according to simple rules. The nondeterministic nature of these interactions often affects complex overall behavior. [3]Currently, the surveillance and exploration industries are particularly interested in the use of remote and unmanned vehicles for research-related activities. Since many target environments are too hazardous or hazardous for human-piloted vehicles, the obvious choice is to use an unmanned vehicle. What implicates swarm robotics as the optimal choice is the fact that an individual member of the swarm is replaceable. As such, this technology could provide access to previously inaccessible surveillance or reconnaissance targets, namely locations contaminated by 1biolo fallout...... middle of paper ...... that's a lot risk at this stage. First, the development of robotic algorithms and available hardware may take much longer than expected, and this opportunity may actually occur in 20 to 30 years. Looking back at the past, we thought in the 80s and 90s that robots were just around the corner, and then again in the 90s. We could still be wrong. Additionally, it has not been proven to be cost-effective except in very specialized and usually very large-scale applications. The potential reward is very high, with a total market of almost $1 trillion, but it is currently outdated. by the risks. Our recommendation to NEW TECHNOLOGY VENTURES would be to wait for the arrival of a market player capable of replacing human labor and focus on matching the customer's costs to the value provided to them. None of the current market players match these characteristics.