Safety-aware Goal-oriented Semantic Sensing, Communication, and Control for Robotics

arXiv cs.RO / 4/28/2026

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Key Points

  • The paper addresses how wirelessly-connected robots can suffer from communication bottlenecks and latency that reduce task performance, motivating goal-oriented semantic communication (GSC) that transmits only goal-relevant information.
  • It argues that prior GSC approaches often neglect practical safety constraints, while much robotics research treats safety mainly at the control layer rather than coordinating sensing, communication, and control in a closed loop.
  • The authors propose a safety-aware, goal-oriented semantic (SA-GS) co-design approach covering sensing, communication, and control for maximizing task effectiveness under real-world safety requirements.
  • They develop an architecture and use-case set, define safety requirements and effectiveness metrics, and analyze safety/effectiveness challenges unique to each subsystem (sensing, communication, control), then outline SA-GS research directions.
  • In a UAV target-tracking case study, semantic-based C&C packet execution reportedly boosts safety rate by more than 2× and tracking success rate by 4.5× versus alternatives considered in the study.

Abstract

Wirelessly-connected robotic systems empower robots with real-time intelligence by leveraging remote computing resources for decision-making. However, the data exchange between robots and edge servers often overwhelms communication links, introducing latency that degrades task performance. To tackle this, goal-oriented semantic communication (GSC) has been introduced for wirelessly-connected robotic systems to extract and transmit only goal-relevant semantic representations. While this improves task effectiveness, it generally overlooks practical safety requirements. Meanwhile, existing robotics research often treats safety primarily as a control-level problem, without systematically considering safety across sensing, communication, and control in a closed-loop manner. To bridge this gap, we investigate how to enable safety-aware goal-oriented semantic (SA-GS) sensing, communication, and control co-design in wirelessly-connected robotic systems, aiming to maximize the robotic task effectiveness subject to practical safety requirements. We first introduce {an} architecture {for} wirelessly-connected robotic systems and representative use cases. We then summarize general safety requirements and effectiveness metrics across the use cases. Next, we systematically analyze the unique safety and effectiveness challenges in sensing, communication, and control. Based on these, we further present potential SA-GS research directions. Finally, an Unmanned Aerial Vehicle (UAV) target tracking case study validates that one of the presented SA-GS research directions, i.e., semantic-based C\&C packet execution, could significantly improve safety rate and tracking success rate by more than 2 times and 4.5 times, respectively.