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      Evolving Soft Locomotion in Aquatic and Terrestrial Environments: Effects of Material Properties and Environmental Transitions.

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          Abstract

          Designing soft robots poses considerable challenges; automated design approaches may be particularly appealing in this field, as they promise to optimize complex multimaterial machines with very little or no human intervention. Evolutionary soft robotics is concerned with the application of optimization algorithms inspired by natural evolution to let soft robots (both their morphologies and controllers) spontaneously evolve within physically realistic simulated environments, figuring out how to satisfy a set of objectives defined by human designers. In this article, a powerful evolutionary system is put in place to perform a broad investigation on the free-form evolution of simulated walking and swimming soft robots in different environments. Three sets of experiments are reported, tackling different aspects of the evolution of soft locomotion. The first two explore the effects of different material properties on the evolution of terrestrial and aquatic soft locomotion: particularly, we show how different materials lead to the evolution of different morphologies, behaviors, and energy-performance trade-offs. It is found that within our simplified physics world, stiffer robots evolve more sophisticated and effective gaits and morphologies on land, while softer ones tend to perform better in water. The third set of experiments starts investigating the effect and potential benefits of major environmental transitions (land↔water) during evolution. Results provide interesting morphological exaptation phenomena and point out a potential asymmetry between land→water and water→land transitions: while the first type of transition appears to be detrimental, the second one seems to have some beneficial effects.

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          Most cited references80

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          A Mathematical Theory of Communication

          C. Shannon (1948)
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            Design, fabrication and control of soft robots.

            Conventionally, engineers have employed rigid materials to fabricate precise, predictable robotic systems, which are easily modelled as rigid members connected at discrete joints. Natural systems, however, often match or exceed the performance of robotic systems with deformable bodies. Cephalopods, for example, achieve amazing feats of manipulation and locomotion without a skeleton; even vertebrates such as humans achieve dynamic gaits by storing elastic energy in their compliant bones and soft tissues. Inspired by nature, engineers have begun to explore the design and control of soft-bodied robots composed of compliant materials. This Review discusses recent developments in the emerging field of soft robotics.
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              Soft robotics: Technologies and systems pushing the boundaries of robot abilities

              The proliferation of soft robotics research worldwide has brought substantial achievements in terms of principles, models, technologies, techniques, and prototypes of soft robots. Such achievements are reviewed here in terms of the abilities that they provide robots that were not possible before. An analysis of the evolution of this field shows how, after a few pioneering works in the years 2009 to 2012, breakthrough results were obtained by taking seminal technological and scientific challenges related to soft robotics from actuation and sensing to modeling and control. Further progress in soft robotics research has produced achievements that are important in terms of robot abilities-that is, from the viewpoint of what robots can do today thanks to the soft robotics approach. Abilities such as squeezing, stretching, climbing, growing, and morphing would not be possible with an approach based only on rigid links. The challenge ahead for soft robotics is to further develop the abilities for robots to grow, evolve, self-heal, develop, and biodegrade, which are the ways that robots can adapt their morphology to the environment.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Soft Robot
                Soft robotics
                Mary Ann Liebert Inc
                2169-5180
                2169-5172
                August 2018
                : 5
                : 4
                Affiliations
                [1 ] 1 The BioRobotics Institute , Scuola Superiore Sant'Anna, Pisa, Italy .
                [2 ] 2 Morphology, Evolution and Cognition Lab, University of Vermont , Burlington, Vermont.
                [3 ] 3 3DNextech s.r.l , Livorno, Italy .
                [4 ] 4 Department of Computer Science, University of Wyoming , Laramie, Wyoming.
                [5 ] 5 Department of Biological Statistics and Computational Biology, Cornell University , Ithaca, New York.
                [6 ] 6 Fluid Structure Interaction Research Group, Southampton Marine and Maritime Institute, University of Southampton , Southampton, United Kingdom .
                Article
                10.1089/soro.2017.0055
                29985740
                237b83a7-1307-4455-a1b5-59a529e36409
                History

                evolutionary soft robotics,evolved soft robots,material properties,optimization,physical simulation,soft locomotion

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