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The Bristol Robotics Laboratory ... [12] in a joint bid from UWE and the University of Bristol and the IAS lab was renamed and relaunched as the Bristol Robotics Lab.
Sabine Hauert (born 16 July 1983 [4]) is Professor of Swarm Engineering in the Bristol Robotics Laboratory at the University of Bristol [5] where her research investigates swarm robotics. [2] Previously she worked at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), Carnegie Mellon University (CMU) and the École Polytechnique Fédérale de ...
Bristol Robotics Laboratory (BRL), the largest robotics laboratory of its type in the UK was officially opened on 10 May 2012 by David Willetts, Minister for Universities and Science. The laboratory is a partnership between University of the West of England (UWE) and the University of Bristol.
Alan Winfield CEng (born 1956) is a British engineer and educator. [1] He is Professor of Robot Ethics at UWE Bristol, [2] Honorary Professor at the University of York, [3] and Associate Fellow in the Cambridge Centre for the Future of Intelligence. [4]
The prototype vehicle was developed in the University of Bristol labs, then at Redhill Farm Business Park and later at Aztec West, outside Bristol. An office was opened at the SETsquared Business Acceleration Centre at the University of Bristol. In September 2009 the company announced that it had won a £6m contract with an unnamed oil company. [8]
EcoBot-II, developed in 2004, by Melhuish, Greenman, Ieropoulos and Horsfield at the Bristol Robotics Laboratory (BRL) UK, was the first robot in the world to perform sensing, information processing, communication and actuation phototaxis, by utilising unrefined biomass.
The Department of Computer Science of the University of Bristol, is the computer science department of the University of Bristol and is based in the Merchant Venturers building on Woodland Road, close to Bristol city centre. As of 2021 the department is home to 145 academic staff, researchers, and PhD students. [1]
The start-up was initially based at the Technology Business Incubator at Bristol Robotics Laboratory. [8] The aim of the company was to develop "affordable, assistive devices that enhance the human body." [4] Open Bionics has partnered with Disney to make prosthetics based on Disney characters for children. [4]