stepmoving
Stepmoving is a method in robotics and computer animation in which a moving agent progresses through a sequence of small, discrete steps between poses rather than following a single continuous trajectory. The approach emphasizes incremental state changes to improve stability, obstacle clearance, and controllability in systems with complex dynamics or limited sensing.
In planning, a stepmoving planner generates a chain of intermediate configurations converging toward the goal, with
Origins and scope: The term stepmoving emerged in robotics literature during the 2010s, though related ideas
Applications span humanoid robots, robotic arms, prosthetics, computer animation, virtual reality locomotion, and warehouse automation. The
Advantages include improved stability, easier integration with perception, and fault tolerance through frequent re-evaluation. Limitations involve
See also: motion planning; interpolation; discrete control; stepper motor control.