Io, Ganymede, and Callisto A Multiagent Robot Trash-Collecting Team

Balch, Tucker, Boone, Gary, Collins, Thomas, Forbes, Harold, MacKenzie, Doug, Santamar, Juan Carlos

AI Magazine 

Georgia Tech's approach differed from other The contest required competing by the robots to collect trash; (3) cooperative robot entries to clean up a messy office behaviors provide for cooperation between strewn with trash. Wads of paper, Styrofoam robots; (4) temporal sequencing coordinates coffee cups, and soda cans were placed by transitions between distinct operating states judges throughout the contest arena along for each robot and achieves the desired goal with wastebaskets, where they hoped the state; (5) fast vision locates soda cans, wastebaskets, robots would deposit the trash. During competitive robot hardware and specifies behavioral states trials, each robot was to gather and throw and transitions between them; and (6) a realtime away as much trash as possible in 10 minutes. The task proved processing are outlined in the next section. The article closes trash in a wastebasket. Unfortunately, the with strategies used and lessons learned at the computational overhead was so great that competition. If a robot was The 10-pound robots were built using off-theshelf near an item of trash or a wastebasket, it components at a cost of approximately could signal its intent to pick up or throw $1700 each.

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