Abstract
A current trend in research on multi-agent control systems is to consider high-level task specifications that go beyond traditional control objectives and take into account the heterogeneity of each agent in the system, i.e., the different capabilities of the agents in terms of actuation, sensing, communication and computation. This article provides an overview of our work on the problem of control of heterogeneous multi-agent systems under both spatial and temporal constraints as well as our perspective on the challenges and open problems associated with the consideration of such spatiotemporal constraints. Initially, we review a set of control strategies introduced by the authors addressing the satisfaction of cooperative tasks such as formation control as well as individual objectives such as reference tracking. The satisfaction of those objectives is ensured using prescribed performance control. Building upon these approaches we then review recent results on control under high-level spatiotemporal objectives expressed in Signal Temporal Logic, a formal language that allows to express complex spatial tasks that must be satisfied within pre-defined deadlines. Theoretical results considering multi-agent systems with various capabilities under spatiotemporal constraints are presented.
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