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Multi-agent systems with CBF-based controllers -- collision avoidance and liveness from instability

Assuring system stability is typically a major control design objective. In this paper, we present a system where instability provides a crucial benefit. We consider multi-agent collision avoidance using Control Barrier Functions (CBF) and study trade-offs between safety and liveness -- the ability to reach a destination without large detours or gridlock. We compare two standard decentralized policies, with only the local (host) control available, to co-optimization policies (PCCA and CCS) where everyone's (virtual) control action is available. The co-optimization policies compute control for everyone even though they lack information about others' intentions. For comparison, we use a Centralized, full information policy as the benchmark. One contribution of this paper is proving feasibility for the Centralized, PCCA, and CCS policies. Monte Carlo simulations show that decentralized, host-only control policies and CCS lack liveness while the PCCA policy performs as well as the Centralized. Next, we explain the observed results by considering two agents negotiating the passing order through an intersection. We show that the structure and stability of the resulting equilibria correlates with the observed propensity to gridlock -- the policies with unstable equilibria avoid gridlocks while those with stable ones do not.

preprint2022arXivOpen access
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