Autonomous robotic systems operating in continuous and highly dynamic environments require reliable and consistent decision-making over long horizons. To address these challenges, this thesis develops hierarchical decision-making frameworks that decompose complex planning problems into multiple layers of abstraction, spanning from high-level task reasoning to low-level motion control. Such hierarchical structures enhance scalability, interpretability, and modularity, enabling robust reasoning across diverse temporal and spatial resolutions. The thesis focuses on two representative case studies: robotic object manipulation in cooperative and collaborative scenarios, and autonomous robot racing in competitive settings. Key contributions include: (i) methods for the automatic acquisition of taskoriented abstractions from unstructured data, enabling interpretable high-level planning, (ii) the development of temporal planning frameworks that coordinate actions over long horizons, and (iii) the formulation of strategic decision-making mechanisms for competitive multi-agent scenarios using non-cooperative game-theoretic reasoning. By leveraging neuro-symbolic reasoning and foundation-model-driven abstractions for cooperative and collaborative scenarios, and non-cooperative game-theoretic planning for competitive scenarios, this research demonstrates that robots can achieve robust, interpretable, and adaptive behavior across diverse multi-agent environments. The proposed frameworks advance the state of the art in autonomous decision-making, providing a foundation for future research in scalable, generalizable, and strategically capable robotic systems.

Task and Motion Planning in Neuro-Symbolic Robotics: From Individual Agents to Multi-Agent Systems / Tikna, Ahmet. - (2026 Jan 26), pp. 1-118. [10.15168/11572_471010]

Task and Motion Planning in Neuro-Symbolic Robotics: From Individual Agents to Multi-Agent Systems

Tikna, Ahmet
2026-01-26

Abstract

Autonomous robotic systems operating in continuous and highly dynamic environments require reliable and consistent decision-making over long horizons. To address these challenges, this thesis develops hierarchical decision-making frameworks that decompose complex planning problems into multiple layers of abstraction, spanning from high-level task reasoning to low-level motion control. Such hierarchical structures enhance scalability, interpretability, and modularity, enabling robust reasoning across diverse temporal and spatial resolutions. The thesis focuses on two representative case studies: robotic object manipulation in cooperative and collaborative scenarios, and autonomous robot racing in competitive settings. Key contributions include: (i) methods for the automatic acquisition of taskoriented abstractions from unstructured data, enabling interpretable high-level planning, (ii) the development of temporal planning frameworks that coordinate actions over long horizons, and (iii) the formulation of strategic decision-making mechanisms for competitive multi-agent scenarios using non-cooperative game-theoretic reasoning. By leveraging neuro-symbolic reasoning and foundation-model-driven abstractions for cooperative and collaborative scenarios, and non-cooperative game-theoretic planning for competitive scenarios, this research demonstrates that robots can achieve robust, interpretable, and adaptive behavior across diverse multi-agent environments. The proposed frameworks advance the state of the art in autonomous decision-making, providing a foundation for future research in scalable, generalizable, and strategically capable robotic systems.
26-gen-2026
XXXVII
2024-2025
Ingegneria e Scienza dell'Informaz (cess.4/11/12)
Information and Communication Technology
Palopoli, Luigi
Roveri, Marco
no
Inglese
File in questo prodotto:
File Dimensione Formato  
Doctoral_Thesis_original.pdf

embargo fino al 12/03/2028

Tipologia: Tesi di dottorato (Doctoral Thesis)
Licenza: Tutti i diritti riservati (All rights reserved)
Dimensione 29.65 MB
Formato Adobe PDF
29.65 MB Adobe PDF   Visualizza/Apri

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11572/471010
Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? ND
  • Scopus ND
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? ND
  • OpenAlex ND
social impact