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Technische Universität Damstadt's robot identifies a victim using a probabilistic world model, based on information from heterogeneous sensors [1] A map generated by Darmstadt Rescue Robot Team. The RoboCup Rescue Robot League is an international competition for urban search and rescue robots, in which robots compete to find victims in a ...
Robocup Rescue Simulation is an education and research project intended to promote the development of robotic agents for search and rescue. [1] The project was initiated in reaction to the Great Hanshin earthquake , which hit Hyōgo Prefecture , Japan, on 17 January 1995, killing more than six thousand people, most of them in the city of Kobe .
In December 2010, a Nao robot was demonstrated doing a stand-up comedy routine, [8] and a new version of the robot was released, featuring sculpted arms and improved motors. In May 2011, Aldebaran announced that it would release Nao's controlling source code to the public as open source software. [ 9 ]
The name RoboCup is a contraction of the competition's full name, "Robot World Cup Initiative" (based on the FIFA World Cup), but there are many other areas of competition such as "RoboCupRescue", "RoboCup@Home" and "RoboCupJunior". Claude Sammut is the current president of RoboCup, and has been since 2019. The official goal of the project is:
Robotic competitions have been organized since the 1970s and 1980s. In 1979 a Micromouse competition was organized by the IEEE as shown in the Spectrum magazine. [2]Although it is hard to pinpoint the first robotic competition, two events are well known for their longevity: the All Japan Robot-Sumo Tournament, of Robot-Sumo in Japan, and the Trinity College International Fire Fighting Robot ...
Pages in category "RoboCup" The following 14 pages are in this category, out of 14 total. ... Rescue Robot League; RoboCup 2D Soccer Simulation League;
rUNSWift in a four-legged league game from RoboCup 2006 in Bremen, Germany. A Nao robot of the SPL team B-Human, RoboCup 2016 in Leipzig, Germany. The RoboCup Standard Platform League (SPL) is one of several leagues within RoboCup, [1] an international competition with autonomous robotic soccer matches as the main event.
GuRoo competes in the annual RoboCup. The goal of this competition is to foster the development of robotics through an annual soccer competition. It is the dream of the RoboCup federation to develop a team of fully autonomous humanoid robots, to play against and beat the human team that wins the World Cup in the year 2050.