Abstract
We are interested in Voronoi diagrams as a tool in robot path planning, where the search for a path in an r-dimensional space may be simplified to a search on an (r-1)-dimensional Voronoi diagram. We define a Voronoi diagram V based on a measure of distance which is not a true metric. This formulation has lower algebraic complexity than the usual definition, which is a considerable advantage in motion-planning problems with many degrees of freedom. In its simplest form, the measure of distance between a point and a polytope is the maximum of the distances of the point from the half-spaces which pass through faces of the polytope. More generally, the measure is defined in configuration spaces which represent rotation. The Voronoi diagram defined using this distance measure is no longer a strong deformation retract of free space, but it has the following useful property: any path through free space which starts and ends on the diagram can be continuously deformed so that it lies entirely on the diagram. Thus it is still complete for motion planning, but it has lower algebraic complexity than a diagram based on the Euclidean metric.
This report describes research done at the Artificial Intelligence Laboratory of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Support for the Laboratory’s Artificial Intelligence research is provided in part by the Office of Naval Research under Office of Naval Research Contract N00014-81-K-0494 and in part by the Advanced Research Projects Agency under Office of Naval Research Contracts N00014-85-K-0124 and N00014-82-K-0334. John Canny was supported by an IBM fellowship. Bruce Donald was funded in part by a NASA fellowship administered by the Jet Propulsion Laboratory.
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Canny, J., Donald, B. (1990). Simplified Voronoi Diagrams. In: Cox, I.J., Wilfong, G.T. (eds) Autonomous Robot Vehicles. Springer, New York, NY. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4613-8997-2_21
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4613-8997-2_21
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