Hiroaki Kitano
Sony Computer Science Laboratory, Tokyo; President, The RoboCup Federation, Bern, Switzerland
"The Robot World Initiative"
4/3/1998: [time not recorded]
[location not recorded]
Abstract: The Robot World Cup Initiative (RoboCup) is an international
initiative to foster robotics and AI technologies using soccer
games. It is one of the fastest growing areas of robotics and AI
research, with over 1,500 researchers and students in over 20
countries throughout the world participating. The basic idea
behind the initiative is to provide a common problem for
researchers so that various different approaches can be evaluated
in the same domain, and technical information can be shared to
promote further research. The ultimate goal of the initiative can
be stated as follows:
By the mid-21st century, a team of soccer playing humanoid
robots shall beat the champion of the most recent World Cup under
FIFA official rules.
Building a robot to play a soccer game by itself does not
generate any significant social and economic impact, but the
accomplishment will certainly considered a major achievement in
the field of robotics. We call this kind of project a landmark
project. RoboCup is a landmark project as well as a standard
problem. The successful landmark project claims to accomplish
very attractive and broadly appealing goals. The most successful
example is the Apollo space program. In case of the Apollo
project, the U.S. committed to the goal of ``landing a man on the
moon and returning him safely to earth.''
Initially, RoboCup is designed to meet the chalenge of
handling real world complexities, though in a limited world,
while maintaining affordable problem size and research cost. As
technology progress, we will soon move to more sophisticated
robotic soccer players, namely legged robots and humanoid robots.
RoboCup offers an integrated research task covering the broad
areas of AI and robotics. Such areas include: real-time sensor
fusion, reactive behavior, strategy acquisition, learning,
real-time planning, multi-agent systems, context recognition,
vision, strategic decision-making, motor control, intelligent
robot control, and many more.
In this talk, I will describe the current status of the
initiative,
illustrate some major technical challenges, and discuss the
future vision of the RoboCup Initiative.
Last updated: Mon Jun 19 17:44:06 2006
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