The DARPA robotics challenge finals : humanoid robots to the rescue
Language: English Series: Springer tracts in advanced robotics | / edited by Bruno Siciliano; no.121Publication details: Springer 2018 SwitzerlandDescription: xiii, 684pISBN:- 9783319746654
- 629.892 D361a
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PK Kelkar Library, IIT Kanpur | General Stacks | 629.892 D361a (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | A184901 |
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629.892 C844i2 cop.4 Introduction to robotics mechanics and control [2nd ed.] | 629.892 C844i2 cop.5 Introduction to robotics mechanics and control [2nd ed.] | 629.892 C844i2 cop.8 Introduction to robotics mechanics and control [2nd ed.] | 629.892 D361a The DARPA robotics challenge finals | 629.892 D46 Design and control of intelligent robotic systems | 629.892 D85i Intelligent robot | 629.892 D993 Dynamics and robust control of robot-environment interactuion |
The DARPA Robotics Challenge was a robotics competition that took place in Pomona, California USA in June 2015. The competition was the culmination of 33 months of demanding work by 23 teams and required humanoid robots to perform challenging locomotion and manipulation tasks in a mock disaster site. The challenge was conceived as a response to the Japanese Fukushima nuclear disaster of March 2011. The Fukushima disaster was seen as an ideal candidate for robotic intervention since the risk of exposure to radiation prevented human responders from accessing the site.
This volume, edited by Matthew Spenko, Stephen Buerger, and Karl Iagnemma, includes commentary by the organizers, overall analysis of the results, and documentation of the technical efforts of 15 competing teams. The book provides an important record of the successes and failures involved in the DARPA Robotics Challenge and provides guidance for future needs to be addressed by policy makers, funding agencies, and the robotics research community.
Many of the papers in this volume were initially published in a series of special issues of the Journal of Field Robotics. We have proudly collected versions of those papers in this STAR volume.
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