Tackling the Curse of Dimensionality in Large-scale Multi-agent LTL Task Planning via Poset Product
Linear Temporal Logic (LTL) formulas have been used to describe complex tasks for multi-agent systems, with both spatial and temporal constraints. However, since the planning complexity grows exponentially with the number of agents and the length of the task formula, existing applications are mostly limited to small artificial cases. To address this issue, a new planning algorithm is proposed for task formulas specified as sc-LTL formulas. It avoids two common bottlenecks in the model-checking-based planning methods, i.e., (i) the direct translation of the complete task formula to the associated Büchi automaton; and (ii) the synchronized product between the Büchi automaton and the transition models of all agents. In particular, each conjuncted sub-formula is first converted to the associated R-posets as an abstraction of the temporal dependencies among the subtasks. Then, an efficient algorithm is proposed to compute the product of these R-posets, which retains their dependencies and resolves potential conflicts. Furthermore, the proposed approach is applied to dynamic scenes where new tasks are generated online. It is capable of deriving the first valid plan with a polynomial time and memory complexity w.r.t. the system size and the formula length. Our method can plan for task formulas with a length of more than 60 and a system with more than 35 agents, while most existing methods fail at the formula length of 20. The proposed method is validated on large fleets of service robots in both simulation and hardware experiments.
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