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More DARPA Love: Introducing the
Centibots |
Introducing the latest in urban
surveillance: DARPA's Centibots. According to the Centibot website,
"The Centibots are a team of 100 autonomous robots (80 ActivMedia
Amigobot and 20 ActivMedia Pioneer 2 AT). The goal of the project is
to demonstrate by December 2004, 100 robots mapping, tracking,
guarding in a coherent fashion during a period of 24 hours."
The website continues:
The Centibots project, funded by the
Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), is aimed at
developing new technology to support the coordinated deployment of
as many as 100 robots for missions such as urban surveillance. A
first team of mapping robots (Pioneers with laser range finders)
surveyed an area while building and sharing a distributed map. They
were followed by a second wave of tracking robots (Amigobots) that
configured themselves to efficiently search for an object of
interest within that area, sensed and tracked intruders, and shared
information among themselves and with a command center. The robots
are autonomous and independent of any network infrastructure,
carrying and deploying their own communication network (using SRI's
patent-pending PacketHop technology). Robots communicate with each
other to coordinate their effort. If one robot fails, another takes
over its task. The goal of this project is to advance the state
of the art in distributed robotics. The development is structured to
exploit existing research solutions that are fairly robust
(self-localization, path planning) and then identifying and
exploring areas where research is still needed but where solutions
are being developed and refined (map construction, multirobot
concurrent mapping) as well as areas where significant research is
needed (human and robot interaction, team formation). Research areas
in which this project is expected to develop innovative solutions
include ·A collaborative, multilevel architecture, adaptive to new
tasks and team organization and scalable to very large teams
·Distributed map building and deployment of robots ·Large-scale,
fault-tolerant communication (PacketHop) ·Robot team interface,
monitoring, and interaction with humans Once a team of robots can be
sent into an unknown building, build a map in real time, and deploy
itself to search the building, practical applications abound. The
robots could be sent into areas that are not safe for humans
(collapsed or earthquake-damaged buildings, chemical-spill sites,
burning buildings, terrorist-occupied structures) or areas where
humans could not see anything (smoke-filled buildings) but where
robot sensors could. Wherever they were deployed, the robots could
build maps and search for people needing to be rescued.
The members of this project are:
SRI International Stanford University
University of Washington ActivMedia Read more about the
Centibots on The Centibot Project Website -- Click
Here
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