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Overview of RoboCup-98

Asada, Minoru, Veloso, Manuela M., Tambe, Milind, Noda, Itsuki, Kitano, Hiroaki, Kraetzschmar, Gerhard K.

AI Magazine

The Robot World Cup Soccer Games and Conferences (RoboCup) are a series of competitions and events designed to promote the full integration of AI and robotics research. Following the first RoboCup, held in Nagoya, Japan, in 1997, RoboCup-98 was held in Paris from 2-9 July, overlapping with the real World Cup soccer competition. RoboCup-98 included competitions in three leagues: (1) the simulation league, (2) the real robot small-size league, and (3) the real robot middle-size league. Champion teams were cmunited-98 in both the simulation and the real robot small-size leagues and cs-freiburg (Freiburg, Germany) in the real robot middle-size league. RoboCup-98 also included a Scientific Challenge Award, which was given to three research groups for their simultaneous development of fully automatic commentator systems for the RoboCup simulator league. Over 15,000 spectators watched the games, and 120 international media provided worldwide coverage of the competition.


CMUNITED-98: RoboCup-98 Small-Robot World Champion Team

Veloso, Manuela M., Bowling, Michael, Achim, Sorin, Han, Kwun, Stone, Peter

AI Magazine

Although our previous and processes the images, giving the positions team had accurate navigation, it was not easily of each robot and the ball. This information is interruptible, which is necessary for operating sent to an off-board controller and distributed in a highly dynamic environment. The final design includes a battery of inherent mechanical inaccuracies and module supplying three independent unforeseen interventions from other agents. It also includes a single board RoboCup competition in Paris (Stone, Veloso, containing all the required electronic circuitry and Riley 1999; Kitano et al. 1997). These improvements by an array of four infrared sensors, which include a robust low-level control algorithm, which handles a moving target with is enabled or disabled by the software control.


CMUNITED-98 Simulator Team

Stone, Peter, Veloso, Manuela M., Riley, Patrick

AI Magazine

We view robotic soccer as an example of a periodic team synchronization (PTS) domain. By perceiving the with no adverse effects on the achievement world, each fully distributed agent builds a of G. Then, based can be thought of as times at which the on a complex set of behaviors, it chooses an team is "offline." In general (that is, when the agents are Although acting autonomously, each agent "online"), the domain is dynamic and real time, contributes to the overall team's goal. Agents receive sensory p at time t.


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

Veloso, Manuela M., Stone, Peter, Han, Kwun

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.