AI-Based Terrain Adaptation Algorithms for Walking Robots

Authors

  • Hari Krishnan Independent Researcher Perambur, Chennai, India (IN) – 600011 Author

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.63345/6r84ah27

Keywords:

Terrain Adaptation, Walking Robots, Deep Reinforcement Learning, Sensor Fusion, Hierarchical Control

Abstract

Legged robots capable of traversing unstructured and unpredictable environments are increasingly vital for applications such as disaster response, planetary exploration, precision agriculture, and inspection of hazardous zones. Traditional model-based control strategies require precise system identification and assume known, quasi-static terrain profiles; as a result, their performance degrades sharply when confronted with unforeseen surface irregularities, variable compliance, or dynamic obstacles (Zhao & Li, 2020). In contrast, AI-based terrain adaptation algorithms leverage data-driven learning to endow walking robots with the ability to perceive, interpret, and respond to diverse terrain features in real time. This manuscript presents a unified framework integrating deep reinforcement learning (DRL), sensor fusion, and hybrid model-based/data-driven control for bipeds, quadrupeds, and hexapods. We detail the system architecture—comprising a perception module (LIDAR, vision, IMU, and force sensing), a DRL policy trained via Proximal Policy Optimization (PPO), and an impedance-based safety layer—that enables robust foothold selection, gait modulation, and reflexive fallback behaviors. Experimental validation in high-fidelity MuJoCo simulations across flat ground, variable slopes, deformable sand patches, and discrete obstacle fields demonstrates that our hybrid controller reduces slip events by 28% and energy consumption by 12%, while increasing average locomotion speed by 15% compared to standard model predictive control (MPC) baselines. We conclude by discussing practical considerations for real-world deployment, including domain randomization, computational latency, and sensor calibration, and outline future directions for extending terrain taxonomy and minimizing sim-to-real gaps (Kumar et al., 2021; Patel & Singh, 2021).

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Downloads

Additional Files

Published

2025-08-01

Issue

Section

Original Research Articles

How to Cite

AI-Based Terrain Adaptation Algorithms for Walking Robots. (2025). World Journal of Future Technologies in Computer Science and Engineering (WJFTCSE), 1(3), Aug (18-24). https://doi.org/10.63345/6r84ah27

Similar Articles

1-10 of 58

You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.