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  <title><![CDATA[PhD Defense by Andrew Messing]]></title>
  <body><![CDATA[<p><strong>Title: </strong>Interleaving Allocation, Planning, and Scheduling for Heterogeneous Multi-Robot Coordination through Shared Constraints</p>

<p><strong>Date: </strong>Tuesday, November 29<sup>th</sup>&nbsp;</p>

<p><strong>Time: </strong>12 pm&nbsp;- 2 pm EST</p>

<p><strong>Location: </strong>(in person) Klaus 1315, (virtual) Link will be sent closer to the date</p>

<p>&nbsp;</p>

<p><strong>Committee:</strong></p>

<p>Dr. Seth Hutchinson (Advisor) - School of Interactive Computing, Georgia Institute of Technology</p>

<p>Dr. Sonia Chernova&nbsp;- School of Interactive Computing, Georgia Institute of Technology</p>

<p>Dr. Harish Ravichandar&nbsp;- School of Interactive Computing, Georgia Institute of Technology</p>

<p>Dr. Nicholas Roy - Department of Aeronautics and Astronautics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology</p>

<p>Dr. Alekandra Faust - Senior Staff Research Scientist, Google Brain Research</p>

<p>&nbsp;</p>

<p><strong>Abstract:</strong></p>

<p>In a wide variety of domains, such as warehouse automation, agriculture, defense, and assembly, effective coordination of heterogeneous multi-robot teams is needed to solve complex problems. Effective coordination is predicated on the ability to solve the four fundamentally intertwined questions of coordination: <em>what </em>(task planning), <em>who </em>(task allocation), <em>when </em>(scheduling), and <em>how </em>(motion planning). Owing to the complexity of these four questions and their interactions, existing approaches to multi-robot coordination have resorted to defining and solving problems that focus on a subset of the four questions. Notable examples include Task and Motion Planning (<em>what </em>and <em>how</em>), Multi-Agent Planning (<em>what </em>and <em>who</em>), and Multi-Agent Path Finding (<em>who </em>and <em>how</em>). In fact, a holistic problem formulation that fully integrates the four questions lies beyond the scope of prior literature.</p>

<p>&nbsp;</p>

<p>This dissertation focuses on <strong>examining the use of shared constraints on tasks and robots to interleave algorithms for task planning, task allocation, scheduling, and motion planning and investigating the hypothesis that a framework that interleaves algorithms to these four sub-problems will lead to solutions with lower makespans, greater computational efficiency, and the ability to solve larger problems</strong>. To support this claim, this dissertation contributes: (<em>i</em>) a novel temporal planner that interleaves task planning and scheduling layers, (<em>ii</em>) a trait-based time-extended task allocation framework that interleaves task allocation, scheduling, and motion planning, (<em>iii</em>) the formulation of holistic heterogeneous multi-robot coordination problem that simultaneously considers all four questions, (<em>iv</em>) a framework that interleaves layers for all four questions to solve this holistic heterogeneous multi-robot coordination problem, (<em>v</em>) a scheduling algorithm that reasons about temporal uncertainty, provides a theoretical guarantee on risk, and can be utilized within our framework, and (<em>vi</em>) a learning-based scheduling algorithm that reasons about deadlines and can be utilized within our framework.</p>

<p>&nbsp;</p>
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