FILOSE - Robotic Fish Locomotion and Sensing

Starting date
February 1, 2009
Duration (months)
36
Departments
Computer Science, Department of Engineering for Innovation Medicine
Managers or local contacts
Fiorini Paolo

The overall aim of FILOSE is to acquire a deeper understanding of the principles underlying fish locomotion and sensing, in order to develop new technologies for underwater vehicles on the basis of biological evidence. More specifically, FILOSE will shed light on how fish exploit lateral line sensing in underwater environments. The lateral line provides fish with the ability to detect hydrodynamic patterns in the surrounding environment, thereby playing a key role in adapting to environmental changes.

FILOSE's main goals are captured by the following objectives:

1. investigate fish locomotion in a controlled hydrodynamic environment, in particular addressing the issue of how fish react to changes in hydrodynamic patterns;

2. develop a novel mechanical design of an underwater fish robot, characterized by high manoeuvrability and low complexity;

3. develop a MEMS-based artificial lateral line;

4. develop a control method for the artificial fish, aimed at reproducing locomotion patterns found in biological fish and based on a central pattern generator (CPG);

5. develop a method to characterize and classify hydrodynamic images, making use of a mechanosensory array;

6. develop a classification method to couple detected hydrodynamic events with locomotion patterns found in biological fish;

7. conduct comparative experiments in a controlled hydrodynamic environment to assess behaviour of an artificial fish equipped with artificial lateral line sensing with respect to the behaviour of a biological fish.

We believe that the proposed investigations are key to building underwater robots that improve on the existing by exhibiting a greater degree of autonomy, adaptability to environmental changes, manoeuvrability, stability and overall lower complexity, as well as moving more efficiently and quietly.

Sponsors:

Unione Europea
Funds: assigned and managed by the department
Syllabus: EUROPA - Progetti Europei

Project participants

Paolo Fiorini
Research Assistants
Research areas involved in the project
Sistemi ciberfisici
Embedded and cyber-physical systems

Activities

Research facilities

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