About this Research Topic
Research on humanoid robotics is attacking problems such as human-robot interaction, whole body control, object manipulation and tool use. These research efforts must be supported by an adequate software infrastructure which allows experimenting with new hardware and algorithms while at the same time reducing debugging time and maximizing code-reuse. The complexity of humanoid robots and their peculiar application domain require that further software engineering efforts are devoted to support the proper integration of diverse capabilities.
While research in mechatronics, motor control, learning and perception receive wide visibility in in international conference and journals, software tools and software engineering know-how are rarely shared among groups working on different platforms.
This Research Topic invites submissions describing efforts in software engineering in the broad field of humanoid robotics. Contributions are sought in (but not limited to) the following topics:
- Design choices and patterns of a complete software architectures of a humanoid platform
- Lessons learned and best practices in software development for humanoid robotics
- Domain Specific Languages and their application to software development in humanoid robotics
- Design of software abstractions for actuators, sensors as well as algorithms for perception and control
- Interoperability between heterogeneous systems
- Strategies for coordination and arbitration of software components
- Real-time architectures and communication protocols
- Knowledge representation and robot memory structures
- Towards 24/7 humanoid robots: Increasing robustness of robot software through testing, self-monitoring, fault tolerance, and autonomous system health inspection
- Simulating the world: How to transfer robot programs from simulation to reality
Important Note: All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.