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2003 NASA/DoD Conference on Evolvable Hardware (EH'03)
Robot Fault-Tolerance Using an Embryonic Array
Chicago, Illinois
July 09-July 11
ISBN: 0-7695-1977-6
Alexander H. Jackson, The Department of Electronics, The University of York
Richard Canham, The Department of Electronics, The University of York
Andrew M. Tyrrell, The Department of Electronics, The University of York

Fault-tolerance, complex structure management and reconfiguration are seen as valuable characteristics. Embryonic arrays represent one novel approach that takes inspiration from nature to improve upon standard techniques. An existing BAE SYSTEMS RASCAL? robot has been augmented so as to improve the motor control system reliability through two biologically-inspired systems: An embryonic array and an artificial immune system.

This paper is concerned with the embryonic array; this is novel in that it supports datapath-wide arithmetic and logic functions. The array is configured to provide an autonomous self-repairing hardware motor controller and is realised using a standard Xilinx Virtex FPGA. As with previous embryonic systems, the logic requirement of the array is greater than that of a conventional FPGA or standard modular-redundancy approach. However, the array offers the advantages of both conventional FPGAs and modular-redundancy techniques; it is a reconfigurable computing platform that provides inherent fault-tolerance through its distributed self-repair mechanism.

Citation:
Alexander H. Jackson, Richard Canham, Andrew M. Tyrrell, "Robot Fault-Tolerance Using an Embryonic Array," eh, pp.91, 2003 NASA/DoD Conference on Evolvable Hardware (EH'03), 2003
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