Neuromorphic Perception and Navigation for Mobile Robots: A Review
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Novo, Álvaro; Lobón, Francisco; García de Marina, Héctor; Romero García, Samuel Francisco; Barranco Expósito, FranciscoEditorial
Association for Computing Machinery
Materia
Computer systems organization → Robotic autonomy Hardware → Neural systems Computing methodologies → Mobile agents
Fecha
2024-01Referencia bibliográfica
Published version: A. Novo, F. Lobon, H.G. De Marina, S. Romero, and F. Barranco. 2024. Neuromorphic Perception and Navigation for Mobile Robots: A Review. ACM Comput. Surv. 1, 1, Article 1 (January 2024), 36 pages. https://doi.org/10.1145/3656469
Patrocinador
MICIU/AEI/10.13039/501100011033 PID2022-141466OB-I00; ERDF/EUResumen
With the fast and unstoppable evolution of robotics and artificial intelligence, effective autonomous navigation
in real-world scenarios has become one of the most pressing challenges in the literature. However, demanding
requirements, such as real-time operation, energy and computational efficiency, robustness, and reliability,
make most current solutions unsuitable for real-world challenges. Thus, researchers are fostered to seek
innovative approaches, such as bio-inspired solutions. Indeed, animals have the intrinsic ability to efficiently
perceive, understand, and navigate their unstructured surroundings. To do so, they exploit self-motion cues,
proprioception, and visual flow in a cognitive process to map their environment and locate themselves within
it. Computational neuroscientists aim to answer “how” and “why” such cognitive processes occur in the brain,
to design novel neuromorphic sensors and methods that imitate biological processing. This survey aims to
comprehensively review the application of brain-inspired strategies to autonomous navigation. Considering
neuromorphic perception and asynchronous event processing, energy-efficient and adaptive learning, or the
imitation of the working principles of brain areas that play a crucial role in navigation such as the hippocampus
or the entorhinal cortex.