TY - JOUR
T1 - Hierarchical Rule-Base Reduction Fuzzy Control for Path Tracking Variable Linear Speed Differential Steer Vehicles
AU - Dekhterman, Samuel R.
AU - Norris, William R.
AU - Nottage, Dustin
AU - Soylemezoglu, Ahmet
N1 - This work was supported by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Engineering Research and Development Center, Construction Engineering Research Laboratory under Grant W9132T-19-C-0004 and conducted by the Center for Autonomous Construction and Manufacturing at Scale at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign. Recommended by Associate Editor Z. Li.
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - A novel waypoint navigation controller for a skid-steer vehicle is presented, where the controller is a multiple input-multiple output nonlinear angular velocity and linear speed controller. Hierarchical rule-base reduction was used in defining the controller. This entailed selecting inputs/outputs, determining the most globally influential inputs, generating a hierarchy relating inputs, selecting only the rules corresponding to the hierarchy, and, in effect, designing a symmetric rule-base. This dramatically reduced the rule-base size, by 97.7%, while maintaining global operating environment coverage. The stability analysis proved the asymptotic stability of the closed-loop controller-vehicle system. In addition, test courses were used to examine the effects of steering disturbance, phase lag, and overshoot as expressed in root mean square error (RMSE) and max error (ME). Outdoor experimental results for the controller's performance were contrasted with a benchmark waypoint navigation controller, pure pursuit, and a simpler implementation that only output linear speed. The controller was found to outperform the pure pursuit and simpler implementation experimentally by 72% and 50% in RMSE, 71% and 40% in ME, validating the controllers viability.
AB - A novel waypoint navigation controller for a skid-steer vehicle is presented, where the controller is a multiple input-multiple output nonlinear angular velocity and linear speed controller. Hierarchical rule-base reduction was used in defining the controller. This entailed selecting inputs/outputs, determining the most globally influential inputs, generating a hierarchy relating inputs, selecting only the rules corresponding to the hierarchy, and, in effect, designing a symmetric rule-base. This dramatically reduced the rule-base size, by 97.7%, while maintaining global operating environment coverage. The stability analysis proved the asymptotic stability of the closed-loop controller-vehicle system. In addition, test courses were used to examine the effects of steering disturbance, phase lag, and overshoot as expressed in root mean square error (RMSE) and max error (ME). Outdoor experimental results for the controller's performance were contrasted with a benchmark waypoint navigation controller, pure pursuit, and a simpler implementation that only output linear speed. The controller was found to outperform the pure pursuit and simpler implementation experimentally by 72% and 50% in RMSE, 71% and 40% in ME, validating the controllers viability.
KW - Asymptotic stability
KW - differential steer vehicle
KW - fuzzy logic
KW - pure pursuit
KW - waypoint navigation
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/86000430364
UR - https://www.scopus.com/inward/citedby.url?scp=86000430364&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1109/TFUZZ.2024.3491059
DO - 10.1109/TFUZZ.2024.3491059
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:86000430364
SN - 1063-6706
VL - 33
SP - 828
EP - 841
JO - IEEE Transactions on Fuzzy Systems
JF - IEEE Transactions on Fuzzy Systems
IS - 3
ER -