DRC
Less than a year from now teams from around the world will compete in the finals of the DARPA Robotics Challenge. The final stage of the competition will take place in Ponoma, California. |
The date has been set. From June 5-6, 2015, California will be the stage for the DARPA Robotics Challenge (DRC) Finals. Teams from around the world will meet at Fairplex in Pomona to compete for the $2 million prize to be awarded to the team that best demonstrates human-supervised robot technology for disaster response.
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“Six months ago at the DRC Trials, we began physically testing human-supervised robots against disaster-relevant tasks. Their impressive performance gave us the confidence to raise the bar,” said Dr. Gill Pratt, DRC program manager. “A year from now at the DRC Finals we will push the technology even further.”
While the tasks at the DRC Finals will be similar to the Trials, a number of new elements will challenge the team’s systems:
- Robots will not be connected to power cords, fall arrestors, or wired communications tethers;
- Humans will not be allowed to physically intervene if a robot falls or get stuck—robots that fall will have to do so without breaking and will have to get up without assistance;
- Speed will be more heavily weighted in the scoring, and all tasks must be completed in a total time of approximately one hour (versus four hours in the DRC Trials);
- Communications will be further degraded and intermittent.
Completing the tasks in the time allotted will require innovations on several fronts, including in the human-robot interfaces teams use to control their robots.
“For the first time, teams will be empowered to exploit cloud and crowd-augmented robotics, two highly promising research areas that allow onsite operators to leverage remote data, computing, and human resources,” said Pratt. “These research areas are in their infancy, but after the DRC Finals we hope to see significant innovation.”
"These research areas are in their infancy, but after the DRC Finals we hope to see significant innovation." |
The 11 finalists are:
- IHMC Robotics (Florida Institute for Human & Machine Cognition, Pensacola, Florida)
- Tartan Rescue (Carnegie Mellon University, National Robotics Engineering Center, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania)
- Team MIT (Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts)
- RoboSimian (NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, California)
- Team TRACLabs (TRACLabs, Inc., Webster, Texas)
- Team WPI-CMU (formerly Team WRECS, Worcester Polytechnic Institute, Worcester, Massachusetts)
- Team Trooper (Lockheed Martin Advanced Technology Laboratories, Cherry Hill, New Jersey)
- Team ViGIR (TORC Robotics, Blacksburg, Virginia; TU Darmstadt, Germany; Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, Virginia; Oregon State University, Corvallis, OR)
- Team THOR (University of California, Los Angeles, California)
- Team Valor (Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, Virginia)
- Team KAIST (Daejeon Metro City, Republic of Korea)
DARPA expects many more teams to join the DRC Finals competition, including new teams sponsored by the European Union and the governments of Japan and Korea.
SOURCE DARPA
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