During the past few years, starting from the two mainstream fields of Ambient Intelligence [2] and Robotics [17], several authors recognized the benefits of the socalled Ubiquitous Robotics paradigm. According to this perspective, mobile robots are no longer autonomous, physically situated and embodied entities adapting themselves to a world taliored for humans: on the contrary, they are able to interact with devices distributed throughout the environment and get across heterogeneous information by means of communication technologies. Information exchange, coupled with simple actuation capabilities, is meant to replace physical interaction between robots and their environment. Two benefits are evident: (i) smart environments overcome inherent limitations of mobile platforms, whereas (ii) mobile robots offer a mobility dimension unknown to smart environments.
CITATION STYLE
Mastrogiovanni, F., Sgorbissa, A., & Zaccaria, R. (2010). From Autonomous Robots to Artificial Ecosystems. In Handbook of Ambient Intelligence and Smart Environments (pp. 635–668). Springer US. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-0-387-93808-0_24
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