A Fusion Method of Local Path Planning for Mobile Robots Based on LSTM Neural Network and Reinforcement Learning

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Introduction
Robots are widely used in industry, agriculture, medicine, military, and other fields, and can assist or replace human work. Robots can also improve work efficiency and reduce costs. Currently, robot technology is gradually becoming more popular and is used in all aspects of life. Path planning is an important research topic for robot navigation, which is the premise and foundation of mobile robots [1,2]. Based on an understanding of the running environment, path planning can be divided into global and local path planning [3,4]. Global path planning calculates an optimal route based on the given start and target points while avoiding obstacles in a known environment [5,6]. Global path planning primarily includes A * search algorithm, rapidly exploring random tree (RRT) and Voronoi diagram algorithm [7,8]. However, they typically require long computation times, particularly when the map is larger. e methods may also fail when the robot enters an uncertain environment. Local path planning explores a collision-free optimal path to reach the target point based on environmental information detected by onboard sensors [9,10]. Commonly used local path planning algorithms include potential field method, fuzzy logic, neural network, heuristic algorithm, and various hybrid algorithms [11][12][13]. Due to the limitations of the sensor's perception of environmental information, certain problems, such as local deadlock, path redundancy, and unreachable target, exist in the local path planning algorithm. To ensure that the robot can avoid obstacles safely and reach the target point faster, it is necessary to investigate algorithms in more detail [14,15]. e artificial potential field method is to model the surrounding environment by constructing the power field. e method is simple and convenient for the underlying implementation, and is suitable for simple obstacle environments [16]. So, it has been widely used in robot path planning. But, there also exist some problems in complex environments, such as local minima and target unreachable. Fuzzy control is based on physiological "perception-action" behavior, which does not require accurate environmental information. Fuzzy control does not exhibit many of the shortcomings of traditional algorithms, such as sensitivity to robot positioning accuracy and strong dependence on environmental information, but exhibits advantages in solving path planning in unknown environments [17,18]. Although the fuzzy control algorithm can yield a better planned path, it must establish complete control rules by artificial experience, and the more the rules, the longer the decision-making time. In addition, fuzzy logic control lacks the ability of learning and generalization and cannot plan a feasible route under special circumstances that the rules are not specifically designed for. Artificial neural network (ANN) is a method to build and train a network model by simulating the behavioral characteristics of biological neural networks. It has intelligent information-processing functions such as learning, association, memory, and pattern recognition. ANN performs online calculation, which is fast and efficient, and is suitable for solving real-time path planning problems [19,20]. Reinforcement learning is an autonomous learning method for mobile robots to explore state-action pairs. Based on the feedback of interaction with the environment, the optimal action in each state is calculated and continuously strengthened. e algorithm simplifies the artificial operation from the mapping of perception to decisionmaking as much as possible, avoids fragile human designs, and improves the stability and intelligence of the task. However, reinforcement learning requires long learning time and is difficult to converge [21,22]. Other intelligent algorithms, such as ant colony algorithm, genetic algorithm, simulated annealing algorithm, and firefly algorithm, mainly search the optimal solution in the defined problem space [23][24][25].
e current research trend is to combine the above methods to improve the shortcomings of each algorithm, and some researchers have done a lot of research on these methods. Guo et al. proposed a novel step optimal path planning method based on fuzzy control [26]. A fuzzy controller with two inputs and two outputs is designed, which can complete the path planning in the common environment and reach the target point successfully. Patle et al. presented a new path planning algorithm based on probability and fuzzy logic (PFL), which uses distance and speed as combination rules. e method is suitable for static and dynamic environments [27]. Fuzzy control depends on human experience, and its fixed rules are difficult to adapt to complex real environments. Gharajeh and Jond proposed a hybrid GPS-ANFIS based method [28]. It is composed of a GPS-based controller for the global navigation of the robot toward the goal and an ANFIS controller for obstacle avoidance local navigation. ANFIS integrates neural network into a fuzzy system to adapt to the uncertainty environment. e paper verifies the feasibility of the proposed algorithm in discrete environments. However, neural network has the shortcomings of long training time and slow convergence. Liu et al. designed a particle swarm optimization trained fuzzy neural network algorithm to solve this problem [29]. But, the algorithm focused on the efficiency and convergence of the algorithm, and the complexity is not superior. Zhang et al. designed and trained a novel deep convolutional neural network with dual branches (DB-CNN) that improved the convergence speed by extracting global and local features, respectively [30]. It was a global path planning method. Sung et al. used two different offline path planning algorithms to generate different training data sets, trained the neural network path planner, and evaluated the performance of the two network models [31]. However, the network with better performance still exhibited collision phenomena in dense environments. e offline training of neural network depends on a large number of data samples, which makes it difficult to collect data and lacks autonomous learning ability. Chen et al. proposed a knowledge-free path planning approach based on reinforcement learning. Using the classic Q-learning algorithm and adding distance information can plan a shorter path [32]. Because the storage capacity of Q-table is limited, Q-learning exhibits space explosion when there are too many states in the running environment. Fakoor et al. presented a path planning method with a fuzzy Markov decision process, which used a fuzzy controller to select actions through the calculated value function [33]. is process yielded marked advantages when processing noise data. Lin et al. proposed an indoor path planning algorithm based on deep learning to classify obstacles [34]. For static obstacle avoidance, a ray tracing algorithm was proposed to avoid obstacles, and a waiting rule was proposed for dynamic obstacle avoidance. However, training data cannot include all obstacles. Yu et al. proposed a path planning method of mobile robot by neural networks and hierarchical reinforcement learning [35]. e simulation results show that the two were organically combined to improve the performance of mobile robots during path planning in static obstacles environments. Wang et al. proposed a novel navigation model with the combination of supervised learning in cerebellum and reward-based learning in basal ganglia, which used the motivated developmental network (MDN) to mimic the supervised learning of the cerebellum and reinforcement learning based on the radial basis function neural network (RBFNN) to simulate the reward-based learning of the basal ganglia [36]. In unexplored places, the artificial agent used the cerebellum model to choose actions instead of the ε-greedy method to accelerate the learning convergence speed of the basal ganglia. Compared to a single algorithm, the combination of different algorithms can give full play to their respective advantages and make up for the deficiencies of the other algorithms.
In this paper, fuzzy control, neural network, and reinforcement learning are combined to realize the local path planning task of mobile robot and solve the uncertainty in unknown environments. e uncertainty problem comes from the sensor detection error and unknown complex environments that can be resolved by the above algorithms.
is paper primarily studies the local path planning problem of robots with unknown environmental information.
rough the characteristics of fuzzy mathematics to transform the current robot state from infinite number combination to a fixed number of concepts, the error of decisionmaking caused by sensor detection error was avoided. But, in the complex environment, such a rough control is not easy to get a feasible path. However, if the states continue to increase, the number of rules will increase with the geometric series, the decision efficiency will decrease, and the probability of decision conflict will increase. In order to optimize the efficiency and length of path planning and improve the accuracy of decision-making, a neural network model can be constructed and trained to calculate the next decision directly through environmental data.
ere are many neural network models that can realize the prediction task. Compared with Back Propagation (BP) neural network, Adaptive Network-Based Fuzzy Inference System (ANFIS), and Radial Basis Function (RBF) neural network, Recurrent Neural Network (RNN) has a memory function for previous inputs, which has certain advantages in dealing with time series [37,38]. As a variant of RNN, LSTM has a long-term memory function and is suitable for processing important events with long intervals and delays in time series [39,40]. According to the common environment and the special obstacle environment with common problems abstracted from reality, representative samples are collected. And, robots can explore the uncollected environment through reinforcement learning, so as to get a path planner with strong adaptability. In addition, a reasonable neural network has generalization ability, and can be successfully implemented in the environment outside the training samples.
Based on the problems with these existing algorithms, this paper proposes a fusion method of local path planning for mobile robots, which combines LSTM neural network, fuzzy control, and reinforcement learning. In the proposed fusion method, various algorithms complement each other to mitigate deadlock, path redundancy, and improve time efficiency. e main contributions of this paper are as follows: (1) LSTM neural network with memory function is used to fit the samples generated by fuzzy control algorithm, which retains the original function of FL, and improves the time performance compared with FL.
(2) e model training uses offline pretrained methods to avoid the problem of long training time and slow convergence in reinforcement learning [41]. (3) e LSTM_FTR model combined with the three algorithms can learn new rules, optimize the path length, enhance the learning and generalization ability of the network, and be suitable for more work scenes. e remainder of this paper is organized as follows. Section 2 discusses the problem definition and assumptions in this paper. e design of the path planner based on the LSTM neural network is described in Section 3. Section 4 shows the pretraining process of the transfer learning network using the FL algorithm. In Section 5, the concrete process of strengthening the learning and training network is presented. Section 6 demonstrates and discusses the test results. e last section outlines the conclusions and future work.

Problem Definition and Assumptions
e navigation problem defined in this paper simulates the transportation task of robots on indoor level ground. e locations of indoor objects are not fixed, and the robot needs no indoor map information. Based on the task requirements, the start and end points are specified, and the robot is placed at the starting point. e goal of the robot is to reach the target point from the start point while safely avoiding obstacles using the local path planning algorithm. In this paper, a two-wheeled differential-drive robot with a lidar sensor is used. e left and right wheels are independently driven by two DC servo motors, and the front and rear wheels are two universal wheels that can turn freely to support the robot.

Assumption 1.
e 180°area in front of the robot is selected as the detection range of obstacles, as shown in Figure 1. e detection distance of the sensor is 5 meters, and any obstacle information outside this range is unknown. One measurement value is returned every 5°, and a total of 37 groups of data are obtained. e obtained data are divided into five groups, and the minimum value of each group represents the distance between the robot left L, left front LM, front M, right front RM, and right R and the obstacle, respectively. e range of the sensor is [0, 5] m. Assumption 3. During task execution, the robot is always aware of its own position information p � [x t , y t , θ t ] at each time step, where t represents the current moment; (x t , y t ) is the coordinate of the robot's position at time t; and θ t is the angle between the robot's forward direction and the x-axis. e motion of the robot is shown in Figure 2, and the kinematics model of the robot is where T is the sampling period. e pose of the robot (x t+1 , y t+1 ) at time t+1 is calculated based on the pose of the previous time t, the linear velocity ω, and the angular velocity v of the current motion.

Design of LSTM Neural Network Path Planner
is section introduces the working principle of the LSTM neural network and the design process of the path planner. e design of the LSTM neural network path planner includes state input, decision output, and the LSTM neural network model.

Working Principle of LSTM.
Due to its unique structure and working principle, the LSTM neural network has the function of long-term memory that allows the network to predict results based on previous data and current input Mathematical Problems in Engineering information, which makes it suitable for processing sequence problems. LSTM can solve the problem that occurs when the input state is the same, but the output action is different in certain environments, allowing the robot to make diverse predictions based on previous path information.
As shown in Figure 3, if we do not consider the previous state data and only judge based on the current state, decision conflicts will occur. In Figure 3(a), the current state of the robot is that there are obstacles located in the RM and R directions, and the target point is on the left side of the robot. e robot should turn left to avoid obstacles and continue to drive toward the target point. e current state of the robot in Figure 3(b) is exactly the same as that in Figure 3(a). If the same obstacle avoidance strategy is used, a local deadlock will appear. If (a) and (b) are made into two different states based on previous information, the robot in state (b) should move along the obstacle to leave the trap area and then move toward the target point. erefore, the LSTM neural network structure can be used to design a network model when known information is limited. e long-term memory ability of LSTM depends on its unit structure, as shown in Figure 4. e inputs of each time sequence pass through these cells, and the concept of the gate is used in the cell structure. e predicted value of the current time is calculated by controlling the state information of the forgetting gate, input gate, and output gate, where t is the current time, x is the input, h is the output, σ is the sigmoid layer, and tanh is the hyperbolic tangent layer. e calculation process of the predicted value is as follows: Step 1: e sigmoid layer of the forgetting gate determines how much information is forgotten from the previous cell state. e f t obtained by h t-1 and x t through the sigmoid activation function is a number between 0 and 1, where 1 represents the complete retention of information, and 0 represents the complete discarding of information. f t is calculated as Step 2: e sigmoid layer of the input gate determines which value will be updated. i t is calculated, then computes the current status candidate C t and the status information C t of the current moment: Step 3: e sigmoid layer of the output gate determines which cell state to output. o t is calculated, the cell states are normalized by the tanh function to [−1, 1], and the result of the output gate is multiplied to obtain the value h t at the current time: rough these processes, the output h t of LSTM layer at time t is obtained. In formulae (2)-(7), the weight matrices W fh , W ih , W Ch , W oh , W fx , W ix , W Cx , and W ox and bias terms b f , b i , b C , and b o are 12 sets of parameters for LSTM training.

Design of Path Planner.
e LSTM neural network path planner is designed as a structure with seven inputs and a single output based on the requirements of local path planning tasks for mobile robots, as well as the kinematics model and sensor configuration of the robot, as shown in Figure 5.
In the input, the nearest obstacle distance detected in five orientations represents the perception of the surrounding obstacles, Angle_θ represents the direction relationship between the robot and the target point, and r GR represents the distance relationship between the robot near or away from the target point:

Mathematical Problems in Engineering
where d GLR represents the distance between the position of the robot and the target point at the last moment, and d GNR represents the distance between the position of the robot and the target point at the current moment. e model output is the angular velocity ω, where ω∈[−π/2, π/2]. e linear velocity v is calculated based on the angular velocity and the safe distance from the obstacle. e robot travels based on the obtained angular velocity and linear velocity. e safe distance between the robot and the obstacle is not below 1 m, and the maximum linear speed is 0.6 m/T. Based on the safe and feasible distance and the principle of angle deceleration, the linear velocity is calculated: where d FO is the distance between the robot's next direction and the obstacle, and l is the distance between the robot's left and right wheels. e defined LSTM model is shown in Figure 6 and consists of five layers. e first layer is the sequence input layer, which contains seven neurons as feature input sequences. e second layer is the LSTM layer, which includes several hidden LSTM units. e determination of the hidden layer nodes is related to the training data sets and the neural network model. e third and fourth layers are fully connected (FC) layers. e fifth layer is the regression layer, which calculates the mean square error loss of the regression problem and follows the final FC layer to obtain the prediction value. e structure of the LSTM neural network designed in this paper is shown in Figure 7, where seven green nodes of each time sequence correspond to seven inputs in Figure 5. Blue nodes represent LSTM neuron nodes in the first hidden layer, adjacent gray nodes indicate FC layer nodes in the second hidden layer, and the dark blue node in the last layer corresponds to the single output. It is assumed that for a set of path planning data containing n sequences, n steps are required to reach the target point, corresponding to n time series. e input of each time sequence is related to the previous time sequence. Taking moment t � 2 as an example, the output value of the current time is determined by the input x 2 of the current time and the state C 1 of the previous time; thus, the neural network model can remember the previous data.
e training methods of the neural network model include unsupervised and supervised learning methods. Unsupervised learning continuously explores and tries different solutions in various environments, rewards correct behavior, punishes incorrect behavior, and fully learns the best behavior in various states to obtain the final model. However, inexperienced autonomous learning requires long computation time and energy, and requires redesigning and debugging many functions and parameters that are prone to improper settings and typically lead to nonconvergence. Supervised learning uses many path data sets to supervise model training so that the model can fit the data set, learn the rules from the data, and be somewhat generalizable. However, obtaining the training data set is critical. In previous work [42], we proposed a path planning algorithm (FL) based on fuzzy control, which can be used for data collection. is paper uses both unsupervised and supervised learning with collected data to pretrain the model and then optimizes the model through reinforcement learning.

Pretraining of Fuzzy Logic Control Transfer Learning
FL is a four-input model with a small detection range. In some complex environments, FL will produce unnecessary redundant paths due to the limitation of known environmental information. If the fuzzy controller with the same structure is redesigned, the number of fuzzy rules to be designed will increase with increasing input; thus, it is difficult to set effective conflict-free rules. In addition, the more the rules, the longer the time each decision takes, which reduces the efficiency of the system. erefore, a lowdimensional input fuzzy algorithm is used to collect the data required by the neural network model to pretrain the network model via transfer learning. e FL algorithm includes the design of the behavior fusion fuzzy controller of the robot in the general environment and the solution strategy of multiple U-traps in the special environment.

Fuzzy Logic Control.
Common obstacle avoidance behavior and walking along the wall behavior are combined into a fuzzy controller through the design of the fuzzy control rules [43]. e fuzzy controller is designed as a structure of four inputs and two outputs, as shown in Figure 8, where the inputs are d LM , d M , d RM , and Angle_θ, and the outputs are v l , and v r . Set up the membership function of the inputs and outputs, and establish the fuzzy control rules. e inputs and outputs are fuzzy, and fuzzy language variables are specified. Table 1 shows the domain and semantics of fuzzy variables. Figure 9 shows the membership function of input Angle_θ. When the value of Angle_θ falls into L, M, or R, the     Mathematical Problems in Engineering 7 fuzzy rules are set as ordinary obstacle avoidance. When the value of Angle_θ falls into LB or RB, the fuzzy rules are set as the behavior walking along the wall. e designed fuzzy control rules are shown in Table 2, and the Mamdani method is used for fuzzy reasoning [44].
As shown in Table 2, there are two actions to be chosen from when Angle_θ � M [d LM d M d RM ] � FNF or NNN. e two optional actions are divided into two fuzzy controllers, and the other rules remain unchanged. In these cases, the fuzzy controller that chooses the left turn (SM, SF) is called the left turn fuzzy controller, and the fuzzy controller that chooses the right turn (MS, FS) is called the right turn fuzzy controller.

Multiple U-Shaped Complex Obstacle Solution Strategy.
To solve the deadlock problem of the fuzzy controller running in a multiple U-shaped complex obstacle environment, a solution strategy of multiple U-shaped obstacles is proposed. A variable wc is set as the cumulative rotation angle sum, and its initial value is zero. Its left turn Angle_θ is a positive value, and its right turn Angle_θ is a negative value. erefore, the absolute value of wc will not exceed 180°when the robot walks normally. If it is more than 180°, it means the robot is trapped in the trap area. Setting Angle_θ based on the following formula, the robot can continue to walk along the wall until it escapes the trap: When using a fuzzy controller to generate a data set, the next decision is made based on the accumulated rotation angle wc and input parameters obtained from sensors. Although wc is not included in the dataset, the dataset generated contains relevant information; thus, the LSTM neural network can learn this function via training with its own memory properties.

Data Set.
e input and output of fuzzy control are different from the required training data. e information is converted into the required data through calculation while collecting them. e detection range of the sensor is expanded to obtain obstacle information in five directions; calculate the distance relationship r GR between the robot and the target in each step; and convert the output linear velocity of the left and right wheels into linear velocity and angular velocity record data, respectively. l is the distance between the two wheels: In barrier-free environments, common obstacle environments, and complex obstacle environments, the FL algorithm is used for 150 simulation experiments, and 150 groups of data are collected. e frequencies of left and right turns cannot be guaranteed to be the same, and it is easy to walk in the same direction after model training. erefore, the 150 sets of paths are mirrored, and 150 new sets of data are obtained. erefore, the training set consists of 300 sets of data, each of which contains several sequences. Table 3 lists one set of 52 sequences, each containing 8 data, of which 7 are inputs and 1 is output. Another 30 experiments are conducted to obtain 30 groups of data as the test set.

Pretraining of the LSTM Neural Network.
e back propagation algorithm is used to train the LSTM neural network model. e weight matrices W fh , W ih , W Ch , W oh , W fx , W ix , W Cx , and W ox and bias terms b f , b i , b C , and b o are 12 sets of parameters that require training. First, the network parameters are initialized based on the training data, the prediction output value of each time is calculated forward, and the error term of each neuron is calculated backward.
en, the gradient of each weight is calculated based on the error term. Finally, the training parameters are determined by the gradient descent method. Because the original gradient descent method is prone to gradient explosion and disappearance, the adaptive moment estimation (Adam) optimizer is selected to update the weights, which is suitable for solving the optimization problem with large-scale data and parameters, and avoiding gradient explosion. e selection of network parameters is determined via experiments, and the orthogonal experimental design (OED) method is used to design the experiment [45]. e number of levels for four factors are set as follows: five levels for the learning rate LR∈{0.1, 0.05, 0.01, 0.005, 0.001}, five levels for the batch size BS∈{10, 20, 50, 100, 150}, five levels for the training time TT∈{200, 300, 400, 500, 600}, and five levels for the hidden layer HL∈{L128, L150, L100F50, L128F60, L100L50}. L100 represents the LSTM layer that contains 100 LSTM neurons, and F50 represents the fully connected layer that contains 50 neurons. A complete factor analysis requires 5 4 � 625 experiments. Compared to total factor analysis, the OED method uses an orthogonal array, which markedly reduces the number of required experiments, time cost, and labor cost. erefore, we used an orthogonal array L 25 (5 4 ) with only 25 experiments. Table 4 shows the experimental design and results: the closer the root mean square error (RMSE) and loss values are to zero, the better the prediction results will be. e mean square error (MSE) is used as the loss function, and R 2 is the determinant of the fit degree of the model, where the closer R 2 is to 1, the better the model fits the data: e success rate is a performance index of whether the goal can be reached by each model based on 100 groups of randomly determined start and end points. Figure 10 shows   a mixed obstacle environment for testing the success rate. e blue color indicates the ground, the surrounding gray fence indicates a boundary in the indoor environment, white cuboids and cylinders indicate obstacles, the black dot indicates the start point, the red dot indicates the end point, and the yellow line indicates the path of the robot. Based on the designed space range, if the robot can reach the target point within 150 steps, then the path is successful. Table 5 shows the analysis of variance (ANOVA) of the experimental results. e learning rate is shown to have a significant impact on the results among the four factors. If the learning rate is too low, the training time must be extended; if the learning rate is too high, there may be a local optimum. Figure 11 shows a comparison of the four factors with the training set fitting degree, test set fitting degree, and path planning success rate. e best learning rate is shown to be 0.005, the best batch size 150, and the lowest training times 600. e results of the hidden layer structure in the training and test sets are not consistent; thus, they must be analyzed separately.
e determination of the number of hidden layers and the number of neuron nodes has an important influence on the training and performance of the neural network, which is related to the amount of training data. L128 yields the best prediction effect in the training set because it has fewer nodes and is easy to train, and the amount of data in the training set is not large. However, with more training data, the model fitting ability will decline. L100L50 yields the best prediction effect in the test set because more layers and nodes yield better data fitting and stronger modelling ability, although the training speed decreases. However, the weight to be calculated increases accordingly, which may make the neural network difficult to train; thus, the success rate of path planning in the experiments is low. Based on the other determined parameters, the experiment is performed again, and the settings of the hidden layer are compared separately. e experimental results are shown in Table 6. Although L128F64 yields a mediocre prediction with the training set, this model yields a better prediction with the test set, and the success rate of path planning is the highest in the 3D simulation obstacle environment. erefore, the hidden layer setting of No. 4 is selected as the final training model. e model that is pretrained using fuzzy control transfer learning is called LSTM_FT, and the training process and results of the LSTM_FT model are shown in Figure 12 and Table 7, respectively. To facilitate observation, Figure 12 shows the training data of the first 150 times. Because each training divides the data into 2 batches, a total of 300 iterations are performed. Table 7 shows the details of the training process. With increased training time, RMSE and Loss gradually decrease and finally converge to more stable values.
Four groups of data are randomly selected from the test set, and the predicted values are obtained by the LSTM_FT model. e comparison of the predicted and real values are shown in Figure 13, in which red "O" represents the predicted values of the test data, and blue "+" represents the true values. e figures show that there are more data with output values near zero, and the prediction accuracy is also high. e number of other output values is small and scattered, and the predictive accuracy also decreases; however, the overall predictive ability is strong.

Combined with Reinforcement Learning Training Network
In the last section, the pretrained LSTM_FT model is developed. Combined with reinforcement learning, the purpose of the training network is to retain the original function of the model through the design of the reward function to learn autonomously in various environments. By fully learning the best mapping of all environmental states and prediction actions, the final trained model can plan a better path, improve planning efficiency, and be generalizable.

Principle of Reinforcement Learning.
Reinforcement learning refers to the agent learning the best action corresponding to each state by interacting with the environment, that is, learning how to make the best decision of the agent. Reinforcement learning algorithms generally follow the Markov decision process. e basic elements of reinforcement learning mainly include state, action, policy, and reward. e purpose of reinforcement learning is to get the maximum cumulative reward and make the whole sequence decision optimal. e principle of reinforcement learning is shown in Figure 14, where the agent represents the robot, the environment represents the running environment of the robot, state s t ∈ s, s is a finite state set, s t represents a state determined by the environment at the current moment, action a t ∈ A, a is a finite action set, a t represents an action made by the robot according to the environment at the current moment, and reward r is the immediate reward obtained by taking action a at state s. e agent selects the action through policy (which means the probability of generating action a according to the current state s). e purpose of reinforcement learning is to maximize the long-term future reward. It does not need specific training data, only reward signals. However, the reward signal may not be given in real time, and in most cases it lags behind. erefore, based on the prior experience, this paper uses reinforcement learning method to design, state, action, reward, and policy, so that the robot can learn autonomously in various environments to obtain better strategies.

Design of State and Action.
Based on the LSTM neural network model, the "state-action" pairs <s, a> of reinforcement learning are designed. Because the input of the neural network is the detection value of the robot sensor, which is the value in the continuous interval, the state s is the return value of the sensor in the current environment. e state set S is expressed as: S � s t |s t � d L , d LM , d M , d RM , d R , Angle θ, r GR . (13) e current environmental state information is the input to the pretrained network model to obtain the output of angular velocity ω. To make the model learn a more accurate mapping relationship and expand the range of action  selection, a disturbance value ε is added to obtain three optional actions: a 1 � ω − ε, a 2 � ω, and a 3 � ω + ε. e action set is A � {a 1 , a 2 , a 3 }. Each time based on the state obtained by the sensor corresponds to three optional actions, and then the linear velocity is calculated based on the action selected by the strategy. e strategy of action selection is to allocate the probability based on the exploration factor e. ω is the original action obtained by the LSTM neural network model based on the state input, and the exploration probability of selecting the other two actions is e/2, respectively. us, the selection probability of action [a 1 , a 2 , a 3 ] is [e/2, 1 − e, e/2]. e roulette algorithm is used to select the action and generate a random number rand p ∈[0, 1]. e action selection strategy is as follows:

Design of Reward Function.
Based on the size of the training environment, when the robot reaches the target point within 150 steps, the length and steps of the path are recorded and stored in the experience pool. If the target  point is not reached within 150 steps, the path is discarded. e same group of start and end points yields 20 reachable paths and then resets the start and end points. Based on the reward function, the path with the minimum reward value r is selected as the optimal path and recorded as the strengthened data set. Reward function is calculated as: where r path is the normalized path length of 20 paths, and r step is the normalization steps. ere is no reward function for each decision. In certain cases, the decision-making based on reward setting in different environments produces conflicts. e rules set by humans cannot be considered comprehensively, and what the model learns is the process. e reward function is determined by the length of the path and the number of steps. e purpose of learning is to learn the shortest path. In addition, collisions will not occur if the sensor does not have a large detection error, which is suitable for vulnerable environments where collisions are not allowed. It may take a long time to adapt to various environments; however, previous experience with pretraining will markedly shorten training times.

Training Process of the LSTM_FTR Model.
Each training randomly determines 20 sets of start and end points in Figure 15(a) to select 20 optimal routes and 15 sets of start and end points in Figure 15(b) to select 15 optimal routes. To reduce learning time, improve efficiency, and retain the ability to escape traps, 15 more pieces of data collected by the FL algorithm in obstacle-free and multi-U environments are added, and 100 pieces of data are obtained as training data each time after mirror processing of 50 pieces of data. e learning parameters are set as shown in Table 8. e network model has a priori knowledge and it does not need to select actions randomly; thus, the initial exploration factor e i is set e success rate reaches 100% after 36 training iterations. Figure 17 shows the path length of 100 paths in the test success rate after the model converges, and Figures 17(a) and 17(b) contain the change information of 50 paths, respectively. When training occurs 44 times, each path reaches a better value, before some path lengths increase with increasing training times. ese results may be due to the randomness of action selection or the overfitting of the model, which weakens network generalization and stability. erefore, 44 training results are considered to be the final network model LSTM_FTR.
e process of reinforcement learning is shown in Figure 18, which shows the test effect in a U-shaped environment after every two rounds of learning, where Round represents the number of learning rounds. As shown in Figures 18(a) and 18(b), the first four rounds did not develop a path that reaches the target point. In the sixth round, as shown in Figure 18(c), the model produces too many redundant paths, even though the path does reach the target point within the specified number of steps. Finally, in the eighth round, as shown in Figure 18(d), the model learned how to move along a shorter path to the target point.

Simulation Results and Discussion
In this section, experimental results are presented, and the characteristics of the proposed method are discussed. On the MATLAB R2020a platform, the algorithms proposed in this paper are simulated and verified in various environments.
e computer used to run the algorithms is configured as follows: Windows 7 operating system, Intel (R) Pentium (R) CPU G3260 @ 3.30 GHz processor, and 6.00 GB running memory. In the simulation, "•" represents the start point, "►" represents the target point, the black areas represent obstacles, and the green dotted line represents the straight line path from the start point to the target point. e red dotted line represents the planned path calculated by LSTM_FTR, the purple red dotted line indicates the planned path obtained by LSTM_FT, and the blue dotted line indicates the planned path acquired by FL.

Simulation Tests in Static Environments.
e fusion method LSTM_FTR was tested in various barrier environments that were defined by a 30 × 30 two-dimensional rectangular coordinate system. Figure 19 shows the test results of FL, LSTM_FT, and LSTM_FTR in various environments and records the path length and average decision time, and the results are recorded in Table 9.
Based on the data in Table 9 and the paths shown in Figure 19, a comprehensive analysis is performed. e graphical comparison between the three algorithms based on path length and average decision time is shown in Figure 20. Based on the average decision-making time in Figure 20(b), the real-time decision-making performances of LSTM_FT and LSTM_FTR with the same neural network structure are similar in time performance; however, they are markedly better than the fuzzy logic control method. e neural network model can accelerate the calculation speed and improve the operating efficiency of the system. From Figure 19(a), the fully trained LSTM_FTR can fit the training data well, and the robot can travel straight to the target point in a barrier-free environment. Figure 19(b) is a discrete obstacle environment, and the network model that expands the detection range can judge the accessible area in time through the perceived information and make a more reasonable plan to obtain a shorter path. Figures 19(c) and 19(d) show that after intensive training, new rules are learned for the new states. After leaving the trap, the robot can judge the feasible direction and make decisions in time, so as to reduce the phenomenon of path redundancy and target unreachable. From Figure 19(e), the LSTM neural  network learns the rule of data in the training set, which can avoid decision conflict by the memory ability, and the robot can escape multiple U-traps along the wall, avoiding local deadlock. In a complex environment, such as Figure 19(f ), LSTM_FTR can also explore an accessible path. Simulation results show the feasibility and effectiveness of the proposed fusion algorithm. In order to further verify the improvement of time performance and path planning success rate of the fusion algorithm, a 3D simulation of home environment is designed, as shown in Figure 21. In the figure, the wall and furniture are obstacles, the red dot represents the starting point, the black dot represents the target point, and the yellow curve represents the path that the robot has passed. In the simulation scene, 100 groups of start and end points are initialized randomly. Based on the designed space range, if the robot can reach the target point within 150 steps, then the path is successful. FL, LSTM_FT, and LSTM_FTR models are used for testing, and the results are shown in Table 10.
e success rate of the LSTM_FTR method in unknown complex environment is 93%. e success rate of FL is only 64%. LSTM_FT fits FL rules and has generalization ability, so the success rate is slightly higher than that of FL, which is 68%. Compared with FL, LSTM_FTR saves 81.6768% decision time in time performance. e 3D simulation environment is close to the actual environment,          Figure 21. and the decision-making time saves the process of calculating the distance from the obstacle, so it is far less than the time in the two-dimensional simulation environment. In the aspect of path smoothness, the turning angle of the robot is used as the evaluation value, and the average turning angle and the maximum turning angle during the experiment are counted. It can be seen from the results in Table 10 that the minimum turning angle of LSTM_FTR indicates that the planned path is smooth and there is no sharp turning.

Simulation Tests in Dynamic
Environments. e fusion algorithm LSTM_FTR proposed in this paper can be applied to the unknown and uncertain environment, not only in the static unknown environment but also in the environment with dynamic obstacles. e simulation test of robot in dynamic environment is shown in Figure 22. e blue rectangles represent the dynamic obstacles and their running trajectories, the black arrow represents the moving direction of the obstacle, and the red sector represents the detection range of the sensor mounted on the robot. ere are three dynamic obstacles in the environment. e obstacles move along a straight line with different speeds, but they are less than or equal to the average speed of the robot. It can be seen from Figure 22 that the robot can avoid dynamic obstacles in different directions and reach the target point successfully. If the speed of the dynamic obstacle is higher than that of the robot, the robot may not be able to avoid collision, so the corresponding control strategy should be added. is will be carried out in the future research work.

Conclusion
In this paper, a local path planning fusion method for mobile robots based on LSTM neural network, fuzzy logic control, and reinforcement learning is proposed. e method combines the advantages of the three algorithms and finally obtains a network model LSTM_FTR that can be used in complex environments. e trained model is tested and compared to FL and LSTM_FT algorithms. Experimental results show that the LSTM_FTR network model has the following advantages: (1) Compared to the traditional fuzzy control algorithm, the path planning efficiency of the fusion model is improved by 81.8768%, which reduces the calculation cost and is more suitable for real-time decisionmaking system. (2) rough the independent exploration of reinforcement learning, new rules are acquired, which can avoid obstacles in time and plan a shorter path in complex environments. (3) e proposed model is adaptable, can self-learn, and can quickly plan a better path based on real-time sensor information in unknown and complex environments. e success rate of path planning is improved.
is paper studies the local path planning of mobile robots based on fusion of three algorithms, and has achieved some research results, but there also exist the following problems and shortcomings: (1) e research is still in the simulation stage, without considering various problems in practical application. If it is applied in real environment, the parameter setting needs to be modified and debugged, and add prejudgment for the movement direction and position of dynamic obstacles, so as to make accurate judgment according to the real environments. (2) e environment input only depends on the lidar ranging sensor, which cannot accurately understand the real environment information. Future research will obtain more abundant environmental information as state input, and improve and perfect the reward and punishment function of reinforcement learning. Furthermore, it will join the research of computer vision, through the analysis of different types of obstacles to make different processing decisions, to train a more adaptive model.

Data Availability
e data used to support the findings of this study are available from the corresponding author upon request.

Conflicts of Interest
e authors declare that they have no conflicts of interest.