Research Article

Formalizing Performance Evaluation of Mobile Manipulator Robots Using CTML

Published: 2020-11-16

Journal: Volume 2B: Advanced Manufacturing

DOI: 10.1115/imece2020-23234

Abstract

Computation Tree Measurement Language (CTML) is a newly developed formal language that offers simultaneous model verification and performance evaluation measures. While the theory behind CTML has been established, the language has yet to be tested on a practical example. In this work, we wish to demonstrate the utility of CTML when applied to a real-world application based in manufacturing. Mobile manipulators may enable more flexible, dynamic workflows within industry. Therefore, an artifact-based performance measurement test method for mobile manipulator robots developed at the National Institute of Standards and Technology was selected for evaluation. Contributions of this work include the modeling of robot tasks implemented for the performance measurement test using Petri nets, as well as the formulation and execution of sample queries using CTML. To compare the numerical results, query support, ease of implementation, and empirical runtime of CTML to other temporal logics in such applications, the queries were re-formulated and evaluated using the PRISM Model Checker. Finally, a discussion is included that considers future extensions of this work, relative to other existing research, that could potentially enable the integration of CTML with Systems Modeling Language (SysML) and Product Life-cycle Management (PLM) software solutions.

Faculty Members

  • Roger Bostelman - National Institute of Standards and Technology
  • Omar Aboul-Enein - National Institute of Standards and Technology
  • Yaping Jing - Salisbury University

Themes

  • Manufacturing Applications
  • Performance Evaluation
  • Robot Task Modeling
  • Model Verification
  • Workflow Flexibility
  • Integration with Other Software Solutions

Categories

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