Long-Term Study of a Portable Field Robot in Urban Terrain
Date
2007-09Author
Lundberg, Carl
Christensen, Henrik I.
Reinhold, Roger
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
The armed forces have a considerable amount of experience in using robots for bomb
removal and mine clearing. Emerging technology also enables the targeting of other applications.
To evaluate if real deployment of new technology is justified, tactical advantages
gained have to be compared to drawbacks imposed. Evaluation calls for realistic
tests which in turn require methods dictating how to deploy the new features. The present
study has had two objectives: first, to gain a comprehensive view of a potential user of
man-portable robots; second, to embed a robot system with users for assessment of present technology in real deployment. In this project we investigated an army company
specialized in urban operations performing their tasks with the support of the iRobot
Packbot Scout. The robot was integrated and deployed as an ordinary piece of equipment
which required modifying and retraining a number of standard behaviors. The reported
results were acquired through a long-term test ranging over a period of six months. This paper focuses on the characteristics of the users and their current ways of operation; how
the robot was implemented and deployed. Additionally, this paper describes benefits and
drawbacks from the users' perspective. A number of limitations in current robot technology
are also identified. The findings show that the military relies on precise and thoroughly
trained actions that can be executed with a minimum of ambiguity. To make use of robots, new behavioral schemes, which call for tactical optimization over several years, are needed. The most common application during the trials was reconnaissance inside
buildings with uncertain enemy presence when time was not critical. Deploying the robot
took more time than completing the task by traditional means, but in return kept the soldiers out of harm's way and enabled them to decrease weapon deployment. The range
of the radio link, limited video feedback, and the bulky operator control unit were the
features constraining the system's overall performance the most. On the other hand, did
properties of the system, such as ruggedness, size, weight, terrain ability, and endurance,
prove to match the application. The users were of the opinion that robots such as the
Packbot Scout would be a valuable standard feature in urban intervention.