National Science Foundation Summer Field Institute for Rescue Robots for Research and Response (R4)
INTF-1 technical search team as it arrived on site and conducted a reconnaissance of the collapsed building. The scientists also got to observe the process by which the search team manager decided whether to use traditional tools, such as acoustic sensors or search cameras, or a robot (figure 2). The robots were deployed the National Science Foundation's Each scientist went into with rescue workers as they went the rubble at least two times and witnessed through a complete deploy-searchcleanup the deployment of each brand Search and Rescue (CRASAR) at cycle or "evolution." Embedding under such realistic conditions permitted the participants to gain an ethnographic understanding of rescue robotics, direct access to one type of collapse site, and an introduction to standard operating procedures such as decontaminating the robots that might impact the design of better robots and software. The scientists brought sleeping bags and slept during the single four-hour rest cycle allotted to the rescue workers.
Jun-15-2004
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- Information Technology > Artificial Intelligence > Robots (1.00)