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  1. The complexity associated with the control of highly-articulated legged robots scales quickly as the number of joints increases. Traditional approaches to the control of these robots are often impractical for many real-time applications. This work thus presents a novel sampling-based planning ap- proach for highly-articulated robots that utilizes a probabilistic graphical model (PGM) to infer in real-time how to optimally modify goal-driven, locomotive behaviors for use in closed-loop control. Locomotive behaviors are quantified in terms of the parameters associated with a network of neural oscillators, or rather a central pattern generator (CPG). For the first time, we show that the PGM can be used to optimally modulate different behaviors in real-time (i.e., to select of optimal choice of parameter values across the CPG model) in response to changes both in the local environment and in the desired control signal. The PGM is trained offline using a library of optimal behaviors that are generated using a gradient-free optimization framework. 
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  2. Sampling-based motion planning algorithms provide a means to adapt the behaviors of autonomous robots to changing or unknown a priori environmental conditions. However, as the size of the space over which a sampling-based approach needs to search is increased (perhaps due to considering robots with many degree of freedom) the computational limits necessary for real-time operation are quickly exceeded. To address this issue, this paper presents a novel sampling-based approach to locomotion planning for highly-articulated robots wherein the parameters associated with a class of locomotive behaviors (e.g., inter-leg coordination, stride length, etc.) are inferred in real-time using a sample-efficient algorithm. More specifically, this work presents a data-based approach wherein offline-learned optimal behaviors, represented using central pattern generators (CPGs), are used to train a class of probabilistic graphical models (PGMs). The trained PGMs are then used to inform a sampling distribution of inferred walking gaits for legged hexapod robots. Simulated as well as hardware results are presented to demonstrate the successful application of the online inference algorithm. 
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