Plotting

 Hinkle, David


The 1996 AAAI Mobile Robot Competition and Exhibition

AI Magazine

The Fifth Annual AAAI Mobile Robot Competition and Exhibition was held in Portland, Oregon, in conjunction with the Thirteenth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence. The first event stressed navigation and planning. In addition to the competition, there was a mobile robot exhibition in which teams demonstrated robot behaviors that did not fit into the competition tasks. The robot competition raised the standard for autonomous mobile robotics, demonstrating the intelligent integration of perception, deliberation, and action.


The 1996 AAAI Mobile Robot Competition and Exhibition

AI Magazine

The Fifth Annual AAAI Mobile Robot Competition and Exhibition was held in Portland, Oregon, in conjunction with the Thirteenth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence. The competition consisted of two events: (1) Office Navigation and (2) Clean Up the Tennis Court. The first event stressed navigation and planning. The second event stressed vision sensing and manipulation. In addition to the competition, there was a mobile robot exhibition in which teams demonstrated robot behaviors that did not fit into the competition tasks. The competition and exhibition were unqualified successes, with nearly 20 teams competing. The robot competition raised the standard for autonomous mobile robotics, demonstrating the intelligent integration of perception, deliberation, and action.


The 1995 Robot Competition and Exhibition

AI Magazine

The 1995 Robot Competition and Exhibition was held in Montreal, Canada, in conjunction with the 1995 International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence. The competition was designed to demonstrate state-of-the-art autonomous mobile robots, highlighting such tasks as goal-directed navigation, feature detection, object recognition, identification, and physical manipulation as well as effective human-robot communication. The competition consisted of two separate events: (1) Office Delivery and (2) Office Cleanup. The exhibition also consisted of two events: (1) demonstrations of robotics research that was not related to the contest and (2) robotics focused on aiding people who are mobility impaired.


The 1995 Robot Competition and Exhibition

AI Magazine

The 1995 Robot Competition and Exhibition was held in Montreal, Canada, in conjunction with the 1995 International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence. The competition was designed to demonstrate state-of-the-art autonomous mobile robots, highlighting such tasks as goal-directed navigation, feature detection, object recognition, identification, and physical manipulation as well as effective human-robot communication. The competition consisted of two separate events: (1) Office Delivery and (2) Office Cleanup. The exhibition also consisted of two events: (1) demonstrations of robotics research that was not related to the contest and (2) robotics focused on aiding people who are mobility impaired. There was also a Robotics Forum for technical exchange of information between robotics researchers. Thus, this year's events covered the gamut of robotics research, from discussions of control strategies to demonstrations of useful prototype application systems.


Applying Case-Based Reasoning to Manufacturing

AI Magazine

CLAVIER is a case-based reasoning (CBR) system that assists in determining efficient loads of composite material parts to be cured in an autoclave. CLAVIER's central purpose is to find the most appropriate groupings and configurations of parts (or loads) to maximize autoclave throughput yet ensure that parts are properly cured. CLAVIER uses CBR to match a list of parts that need to be cured against a library of previously successful loads and suggest the most appropriate next load. As one of the first fielded CBR systems, CLAVIER demonstrates that CBR is a practical technology that can be used successfully in domains where more traditional approaches are difficult to apply.


Applying Case-Based Reasoning to Manufacturing

AI Magazine

's central purpose is to find the most The use of composite materials, Composite part fabrication requires two especially in aerospace applications, is on the major steps: layup and curing. Layup is the increase because of their unique weight and painstaking process in which multiple layers strength qualities. Depending on the orientation of graphite and fiberglass composite material of the graphite fibers, a part can be are fitted by hand on the exterior of a contoured extremely flexible in one direction but rigid mold. In addition, a part made from takes from two to seven days, depending on composite material is both lighter and the size of the mold and the skill of the technician. The increased use of In the second step, curing, the molded graphite parts, as well as the high cost of a composite material is hardened by pressurized spoiled part (as much as $50,000 for a single heating in a large convection autoclave.


The Winning Robots from the 1993 Robot Competition

AI Magazine

The second annual Robot Competition and Exhibition sponsored by the Association for the Advancement of Artificial Intelligence was held in Washington D.C. on 13-15 July 1993 in conjunction with the Eleventh National Conference on Artificial Intelligence. This article describes the robots that placed first and second in each event and compares their strategies and their resulting successes and difficulties.


The Winning Robots from the 1993 Robot Competition

AI Magazine

Place he 1993 robot competition consisted of the Office, (2) Office Delivery, and (3) Lockheed Palo Alto Research Labs, Second Office Rearrangement. The unifying theme Place for these events was autonomous robotics in realistic office environments. The legs, and then to quickly complete a slalom office contained actual furniture, including course and recognize the finish wall. In the second event, Office Delivery, the This realistic environment was a hurdle for objective was to self-locate using an office conventional robotic sensory systems. Thinlegged map, search an area for a given object (a coffeepot), tables and chairs are nearly invisible to and then navigate to a specified sonars, as are black cabinets and bookcases to delivery area.