CORNELL UNIVERSITY
Cornell
engineers join $2M DARPA Robotics Challenge.
Cornell engineers are adding their expertise in robot autonomy
to the DARPA
Robotics Challenge(DRC), a multi-year, international prize
competition sponsored by the U.S. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency
(DARPA).
Hadas Kress-Gazit, assistant
professor of mechanical and aerospace engineering; graduate student Spyros
Maniatopoulos; and Roberto Villalba ’15 have joined Team
ViGIR (Virginia-Germany Interdisciplinary Robotics) to compete for
the top prize of $2 million. ViGIR made the top 10 teams following a December
2013 trial, earning a spot in the challenge finals in June 2015. Cornell joined
the team in August.
The DRC follows on the Grand
Challenge (2005) and Urban Challenge (2007), which featured a Cornell team. Its goal is to develop advanced
ground robots capable of complex tasks during natural or man-made disasters,
such as the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant disaster in 2011.
It’s not quite at the level of
Robocop running into burning buildings, but the DRC teams are trying to develop
robots capable of assisting humans in responding to such disasters,
Maniatopoulos said.
“What we want is to create
autonomy for the robot by making provably correct robot controllers,”
Maniatopoulos said. The Cornell team led by Kress-Gazit is contributing
research in bringing full or partial autonomy to the robotic platform, reducing
the need for human input to accomplish tasks. Robots that can make decisions
and automate tasks without help at every turn could prove invaluable in
disaster situations and countless other applications.
“Our research is about
synthesizing controllers from high-level behavior specifications, to reduce
operator overload, and to provide guarantees,” Kress-Gazit said. That includes
guarantees of safe behavior and self-monitoring ability of all the robot’s
systems, even in the event of human error.
Team ViGIR’s principal
investigator is David Conner, a senior research scientist at TORC Robotics, a
Virginia Tech startup. Team ViGIR, which initially included researchers from
Virginia Tech Center for Human-Computer Interaction and Germany’s Technical
University in Darmstadt, competed in a simulation-based DARPA Virtual Robotics Challenge in June 2013.
Based on their sixth place
finish, they were awarded a humanoid “Atlas” robot developed by Boston Dynamics
and a chance to compete in the DRC Trials in December 2013. Their robot
is named Florian, the patron saint of firefighters and rescuers. In addition to
Cornell, Team ViGIR has expanded to include researchers from Oregon State University
and Germany’s University of Hanover.
At the DRC finals in June 2015,
to be held in Pomona, California, an untethered Florian will need to complete a
series of about 10 tasks in one hour. The tasks range from opening a series of
doors, to climbing a ladder, to navigating rough terrain. Before all that, it
will need to drive a car. Wi-Fi will be intermittent, underscoring the need for
at least some autonomy for the robot. The competition was purposefully designed
to be difficult, the DRC website says, to spur innovation and shed light on the
most difficult problems in robotics.
By Anne Ju
By Anne Ju
