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Highly Autonomous Systems Workshop

AI Magazine

Researchers and technology developers from the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), other government agencies, academia, and industry recently met in Pasadena, California, to take stock of past and current work and future challenges in the application of AI to highly autonomous systems. The meeting was catalyzed by new opportunities in developing autonomous spacecraft for NASA and was in part a celebration of the fictional birth year of the HAL-9000 computer.


The Find-Life-on-Mars Event

AI Magazine

Points were awarded for picking up objects of a specific type (ball, cube, or moving squiggle ball) and specific color (figure 2). Penalty points were deducted for he Mars Pathfinder Mission, featuring for the Find-Life-on-Mars event. The general colliding with rocks, placing an object in the concept was to have the robots locate, collect, wrong door, and traveling within the danger and deliver a variety of "life forms," zones. We also specified penalties for modifying including both stationary and moving objects. the lander, although no group took advantage Technically, the event was designed to highlight of this option. No other modification of mobile manipulation, object recognition, the environment was allowed.


Interactive and Mixed-Initiative Decision-Theoretic Systems

AI Magazine

The Association for the Advancement of Artificial Intelligence Spring Symposium on Interactive and Mixed-Initiative Decision-Theoretic Systems was held at Stanford University from 23-25 March 1998. The symposium attracted approximately 30 researchers from around the world. Topics discussed included incremental model construction, user interaction, explanation generation, and applications.


CMUNITED-97: RoboCup-97 Small-Robot World Champion Team

AI Magazine

Robotic soccer is a challenging research domain that involves multiple agents that need to collaborate in an adversarial environment to achieve specific objectives. In this article, we describe CMUNITED, the team of small robotic agents that we developed to enter the RoboCup-97 competition. We designed and built the robotic agents, devised the appropriate vision algorithm, and developed and implemented algorithms for strategic collaboration between the robots in an uncertain and dynamic environment. The robots can organize themselves in formations, hold specific roles, and pursue their goals. In game situations, they have demonstrated their collaborative behaviors on multiple occasions. We present an overview of the vision-processing algorithm that successfully tracks multiple moving objects and predicts trajectories. The article then focuses on the agent behaviors, ranging from low-level individual behaviors to coordinated, strategic team behaviors. CMUNITED won the RoboCup-97 small-robot competition at the Fifteenth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence in Nagoya, Japan.


Profile of a Winner: McGill University

AI Magazine

The object-recognition module that was nonmanipulator category. In the last days before the finals, the students heavily modified or replaced. For example, during the types of object that were in the actual environment. Once pixels to modify their subsystems). It is fair to say the competition served to and a flag ground-plane assumption.


Toward Integrated Soccer Robots

AI Magazine

Robot soccer competition provides an excellent opportunity for integrated robotics research. In particular, robot players in a soccer game must recognize and track objects in real time, navigate in a dynamic field, collaborate with teammates, and strike the ball in the correct direction. All these tasks demand robots that are autonomous (sensing, thinking, and acting as independent creatures), efficient (functioning under time and resource constraints), cooperative (collaborating with each other to accomplish tasks that are beyond an individual's capabilities), and intelligent (reasoning and planning actions and perhaps learning from experience). Furthermore, all these capabilities must be integrated into a single and complete system, which raises a set of challenges that are new to individual research disciplines. This article describes our experience (problems and solutions) in these aspects. Our robots share the same general architecture and basic hardware, but they have integrated abilities to play different roles (goalkeeper, defender, or forward) and use different strategies in their behavior. Our philosophy in building these robots is to use the least sophistication to make them as robust and integrated as possible. At RoboCup-97, held as part of the Fifteenth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence, these integrated robots performed well, and our DREAMTEAM won the world championship in the middle-size robot league.


ISIS: An Explicit Model of Teamwork at RobotCup-97

AI Magazine

's performance in is driven by's development was driven by the Using Further aspects of multiagent agents could not always quickly locate and agent and team modeling. With respect to learning, as well as arenas of agent and intercept the ball or maintain awareness of teamwork, our previous work was based on team modeling (particularly to recognize positions of teammates and opponents. It then enables team members to make any decisions. Instead, all the decision Yaser Al-Onaizan, Ali Erdem, autonomously reason about coordination making rests with the higher level, Gal A. Kaminka, Stacy C. Marsella, and communication in teamwork, providing implemented in the Given its domain architecture, which takes into account the independence, it also enables reuse across recommendations made by the lower level. 's teamwork reasoning is currently test domain given its substantial also implemented in


The "Hors d'Oeuvres, Anyone?" Event

AI Magazine

The first Hors d'Oeuvres, Anyone? event at the Association for the Advancement of Artificial Intelligence Mobile Robot Competition was held in 1997. Five teams entered their robotic waiters into the contest. After a preliminary round to judge the safety of the robots, the robots served conference attendees at the opening reception of the Fourteenth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence.


Enterprise Modeling

AI Magazine

To remain competitive, enterprises must become increasingly agile and integrated across their functions. Enterprise models play a critical role in this integration, enabling better designs for enterprises, analysis of their performance, and management of their operations. This article motivates the need for enterprise models and introduces the concepts of generic and deductive enterprise models. It reviews research to date on enterprise modeling and considers in detail the Toronto virtual enterprise effort at the University of Toronto.


AAAI News

AI Magazine

Details about program does not provide any scholarship information, please contact AAAI at these programs will also be mailed to funds, and is designed for local fss@aaai.org