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Creators/Authors contains: "Rouse, Natasha"

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  1. Stable Heteroclinic Channels (SHCs) are dynamical systems composed of connected saddle equilibria. This work demonstrates a control system that combines SHCs with movement primitives to enable swimming in a simulated six segment snake robot. We identify control system parameters for lateral undulation, where all joints oscillate with the same amplitude, and anguilliform swimming, where joint amplitudes increase linearly from the head to the tail. Swimming speed is improved by learning SHC movement primitive parameters. We also propose a method for adapting the gait amplitude and frequency with tactile sensor input to accommodate obstacles. Then, we evaluate the relationship between SHC movement primitive parameters and the resulting trajectories. The swimming speed and efficiency of SHC controllers for each gait are compared against a conventional serpenoid controller, which derives joint trajectories from sinusoids. Controllers are evaluated first in an unobstructed environment, then in straight passages of various widths, and finally in 65 randomly generated uneven channels. We find that the amplitudes of joint oscillations scale proportionally with the SHC controller parameters. Due to gait optimization, as well as adaptive amplitude and frequency in response to tactile input, the learned SHC control system exhibits an average 28.8% greater speed than a serpenoid controller that only adapts amplitude during contact. This research demonstrates that SHCs benefit from intuitive tuning like serpenoid control, while also effectively incorporating sensory information to generate smooth kinematic trajectories. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available February 24, 2026
  2. Abstract Bio-inspired robot controllers are becoming more complex as we strive to make them more robust to, and flexible in, noisy, real-world environments. A stable heteroclinic network (SHN) is a dynamical system that produces cyclical state transitions using noisy input. SHN-based robot controllers enable sensory input to be integrated at the phase-space level of the controller, thus simplifying sensor-integrated, robot control methods. In this work, we investigate the mechanism that drives branching state trajectories in SHNs. We liken the branching state trajectories to decision-splits imposed into the system, which opens the door for more sophisticated controls -- all driven by sensory input. This work provides guidelines to systematically define an SHN topology, and increase the rate at which desired decision states in the topology are chosen. Ultimately, we are able to control the rate at which desired decision states activate for input signal-to-noise ratios across six orders of magnitude. 
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  3. Dynamic systems which underlie controlled systems are expected to increase in complexity as robots, devices, and connected networks become more intelligent. While classical stable systems converge to a stable point (a sink), another type of stability is to consider a stable path rather than a single point. Such stable paths can be made of saddle points that draw in trajectories from certain regions, and then push the trajectory toward the next saddle point. These chains of saddles are called stable heteroclinic channels (SHCs) and can be used in robotic control to represent time sequences. While we have previously shown that each saddle is visualizable as a trajectory waypoint in phase space, how to increase the fidelity of the trajectory was unclear. In this paper, we hypothesized that the waypoints can be individually modified to locally vary fidelity. Specifically, we expected that increasing the saddle value (ratio of saddle eigenvalues) causes the trajectory to slow to more closely approach a particular saddle. Combined with other parameters that control speed and magnitude, a system expressed with an SHC can be modified locally, point by point, without disrupting the rest of the path, supporting their use in motion primitives. While some combinations can enable a trajectory to better reach into corners, other combinations can rotate, distort, and round the trajectory surrounding the modified saddle. Of the system parameters, the saddle value provides the most predictable tunability across 3 orders of magnitude. 
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  4. null (Ed.)