Abstract

The rapid advancement of artificial intelligence technology has significantly enhanced the intelligence of mobile robots, facilitating their widespread utilization in unmanned driving, smart home systems, and various other domains. As the scope, scale, and complexity of robot deployment continue to expand, there arises a heightened demand for enhanced computational power and real-time performance, with path planning emerging as a prominent research focus. In this study, we present an adaptive Lévy flight–rotation slime mold algorithm (LRSMA) for global robot motion planning, which incorporates LRSMA with the cubic Hermite interpolation. Unlike traditional methods, the algorithm eliminates the need for a priori knowledge of appropriate interpolation points. Instead, it autonomously detects the convergence status of LRSMA, dynamically increasing interpolation points to enhance the curvature of the motion curve when it surpasses the predefined threshold. Subsequently, it compares path lengths resulting from two different objective functions to determine the optimal number of interpolation points and the best path. Compared to LRSMA, this algorithm reduced the minimum path length and average processing time by (2.52%, 3.56%) and (38.89%, 62.46%), respectively, along with minimum processing times. Our findings demonstrate that this method effectively generates collision-free, smooth, and curvature-constrained motion curves with the least processing time.

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