Robot competition
Encyclopedia
A robotic competition is an event where robot
s have to accomplish a given task. Usually they have to beat other robots in order to become the best one.
Most competitions are for schools but as time goes by, several professional competitions are arising.
There is a wide variety of competitions for robot
s of various types. The following examples describe a few of the higher profile events.
was a rally style race for driverless cars. The unclaimed 2004 prize for navigating through the Mojave Desert was $1,000,000. The farthest any participant got was only 7.4 miles. However, the 2005 prize of $2,000,000 was claimed by Stanford University
. In this race, five autonomous vehicles crossed the finish line.
The 2007 competition pitted the vehicles against a mock-urban course with live traffic obstacles. Six vehicles crossed the finish line. Cash prizes were $2,000,000 for First Place, $1,000,000 for Second Place, and $500,000 for Third Place. DARPA believes that autonomous vehicle technology will continue to rapidly develop without further contests so the race series has ended.
The race was to help develop technology required by the US Congress to be installed on US military land combat vehicles "as soon as possible and before 2015." Accomplishing the conversion of one third of the US Army's one million vehicles to driverless operation still represents a significant challenge. Other branches of the US armed forces have similar numbers of land vehicles to convert. Congress has also set deadlines for air and sea vehicle conversions.
The social benefit of preventing traffic fatalities by applying DARPA Grand Challenge robotics to land transportation is significant. Military use of this technology is unofficially estimated at being able to save one soldiers life a day. Civilian use of this technology in cars, busses, and trucks is estimated by the US Department of Transportation as being able to save 166 lives a day on US roadways. To put the figures into perspective, the number of traffic fatalities we are currently experiencing is equal to one commercial airliner crashing every day with a total loss of life or the complete loss of an entire US town every year. Statistics from the CDC indicate for ages 0 to 49, the age group most often killed in preventable traffic accidents, that "curing traffic accidents" as a cause of death would save more lives in that age group than curing cancer would.
is a demonstration of the abilities of modern robotics. Its directed towards security and defence robots and aimed at European participants from both academic and commercial backgrounds. Its held annually alternating between a civilian and a military version each year on different places around Europe.
The goal is to build a robot which is able to move without human help off road. The competition is held annually at the mid-summer Jämi Fly In air show in Finland.
The competition track is randomly selected 10 minutes before competition by the judge, marked with four wooden sticks to make a 200 meter track. The track consists of sand roads and fields containing bushes and rocks.
The robots must run outside the sticks from start to finish without human assistance as fast as possible. YouTube movies and pictures from the 2007 and 2008 competitions are available.
are NASA
prize contests for non-government funded technological achievements, including robotics, by US citizens.
Robot Racing is an effort to promote research in autonomous mobile robotics technology in a structure that is challenging and exciting, for both the competitors and spectators. The competition provides students with real-world, hands-on engineering design challenges, including components of mechanical, computer, control software, and system integration. Students work together to design and build robotic vehicles that can navigate twisting, obstacle-filled courses without any human guidance or control. Everyone must work together to design and build a robot that integrates advanced control theory, machine vision, and electronics into a vehicle designed to handle rough terrain.
Robot Racing 2010 will take place on July 24, 2010 from 9am to 7pm at the St. Denis Stadium, University of Windsor, 2555 College Ave., Windsor, ON N9B3P4. Up to CAD $5000.00 in awards are offered. Compete or come take part in the action! Admission is free. Visit the website http://www.robotracing.ca for more information.
(formerly ROBOlympics) host over 70 different events and are modeled on the human Olympics. Robot soccer, sumo, combat, android wrestling, maze solving, fire-fighting, biped races, balancer races, and exoskeletons are a few of the events held. Teams compete from around the world, and RoboGames has no prerequisites for contestants, it is open to anyone regardless of age or affiliation.
, Boosting Engineering, Science, and Technology, is a national 6-week robotics
competition in the United States
held each fall, designed to help interest middle school and high school students in possible engineering
careers. BEST is the only robotics competition for students in this age group that requires no entry fees or kit costs for participation. BEST Robotics has added Regional and National Competitions to their programs with the first National Competition held in Dallas during 2010 in conjunction with the International VEX competition. The next National Competition (now billed as World's BEST) will once again be held in conjunction with the International VEX competition at ESPN's Wide World of Sports Complex at Disney World on April 14–16, 2011.
in Ankara, Turkey. It is the longest-running and the most well-known robotic organization in Turkey. The Robotics Days include 8 different categories of competitions as well as lectures, seminars and workshops designed to bring professionals, academics and amateurs together.
competitions, small robots try to solve a maze in the fastest time. The current format involves the "mouse" finding its way to the centre of a 16x16 maze. The competitions have been held since 1979 and are conducted in countries around the world.
, Founder of FIRST
(For Inspiration and Recognition of Science and Technology), created the world's leading high school robotics competition in 1992. FIRST provides a varsity-like competitive forum that inspires in young people, their schools and communities in an appreciation of science and technology.
Their robotics competition is a multinational competition that teams professionals and young people to solve an engineering design problem in an intense and competitive way. Their outreach includes the original FIRST Robotics Competition
(FRC) and the newer FIRST Tech Challenge
(FTC) for ages 14–18, the FIRST Lego League
(FLL) for ages 9–14, and Junior FIRST Lego League
(Jr.FLL) for ages 6–9. In 2007, there were over 130,000 students and 37,000 adult mentors from around the world involved in at least one of FIRST's competitions. FIRST encourages teams to find adults from outside of the school environment who can pass on their knowledge as mentors. There are thousands of scholarships available to students who participate.
The FLL robots are entirely autonomous; the FTC competition involves separate autonomous and driver control matches; and the FRC competition involves an initial autonomous period (10 or 15 seconds) followed by tele-operated driver control.
(robocup.org) is a competitive organization dedicated to developing a team of fully autonomous humanoid robots that can win against the human world soccer champion team by the year 2050. There are many different leagues ranging from computer simulation
, to full-size humanoid robots.
It contains three competitions:
As is the case with RoboCup
, all robots are designed and developed solely by the students and act autonomously without any form of remote control or human intervention.
RoboCupJunior - RCJ (rcj.robocup.org) is the grade-school level from this world renounced A.I intensive RoboCup game which launched its first official competitive game in 1997. This initiative is to foster the learning in artificial intelligence and robotics research by providing a standard problem where a wide range of technologies can be integrated and examined.
RCJ's game environment is filled with variable elements. In other words, dimensions and locations of objects are unknown in the most part of the game. Therefore, participants must focus on robot's self-awareness of the environment with various sensors and needs very robust programming skill.
Even though RCJ is a grade-level participation game, it demands high aptitude in abstract thinking, especially in programming the robot's intelligence to handle variable elements on the game. It allows its students to refine project outcomes over time with more sophisticated algorithms and hardware improvement without performing similar routines every year.
since 2009. The organization is open to undergraduates, graduates and high school students.
is a robotics competition for middle and high school students. Organized by the KISS Institute for Practical Robotics, Botball encourages participants to work constructively within their team building basic communication, problem solving, design, and programming skills. Each team builds one or more (up to four) robots that will autonomously move scoring objects into scoring positions.
(MIT) and requires multithreaded applications of image processing, robotic movements, and target ball deposition. The robots are run with Ubuntu Linux and run on an independent OrcBoard platform that facilitates sensor-hardware additions and recognition.
also has an annual firefighting robot contest which is participated by high schools and colleges from around the world including from countries like Israel and China. This is the largest, public robotics competition held in the U.S. that is open to entrants of any age, ability or experience from anywhere in the world http://cs.wellesley.edu/~rds/rds01/resources.html#competitions/. The 14th Annual Trinity College Fire-Fighting Home Robot Contest was held on the Trinity campus in Hartford, Connecticut on April 14–15 in 2007. One new event in the concept division was added to the 2007 competition, which is the baby-finding contest. Participants will have to find both the flame and the simulated baby, extinguish the former and announce (or bring it to people's attention somehow) when it finds the latter in the expert division. In the concept division, simply finding the baby and notifying the people is sufficient. Check the event website for contest details.
, the Duke Annual Robo-Climb Competition (DARC) challenges students to create innovative wall-climbing robot
s that can ascend vertical surfaces. The competition, which will be held on Duke's campus in Durham, North Carolina
, will allow students to showcase their wall-climbing technology in an international forum and encourage students to network with industry leaders.
, with one being a robot attending and delivering a conference talk, the other being operator-interaction challenges in rescue robotics.
since 2007. The organization is open to undergraduates, graduates and high school students.
is an annual robotics competition originated at Lawrence Technological University
in 2000 for students in grades 5 to 12. Robofest challenges student teams, to design, build, and program fully autonomous robots. The aim is to promote student mastery of mathematics and science through enjoyable activity. The competition categories in junior and senior age divisions in Robofest are games, creative exhibitions, pentathlon, sumo, and fashion show. The Robofest name is also used by several other organizations worldwide.
and is open to professionals, hobbyists, college students and advanced high school students. The current competition category is the "Mini Urban Challenge" using a PC-based robot with a camera called L2Bot.
software for simulating a robotic scenario where two rat robots compete for survival in a maze-like environment. The developed robot controllers can be transferred in real e-puck robots roaming an interactive LEGO
maze. This competition is now widely used for teaching.
member broadcasters.
The contest is hosted by a different broadcaster/country every year.
, world's largest hacker convention hosts a robotic competition called DefconBots
. This competition's objective has changed a couple of times. From 2006 to 2008 the goal was to build an autonomous stationary robot to shoot down the targets. Previous competitions included line following and transporting ping-pong balls across the arena. The contest is open to everyone.
is an annual robot contest taking place in Europe. The teams must build autonomous robots, that collect elements on a given playing area with new rules every year.
The final round is hosted by different countries every year. The best three teams from every country may take part in the international final.
, Romania
. The teams have to create a robot that helps humans and simplify their life.
, NUST
Islamabad,Pakistan to participate in the National Engineering Robotics Contest (NERC).
The Contest provides a platform to students to come forth with novel engineering ideas.
Over 155 teams participating in NERC 2010.
Contestants have to fabricate their robot right from the scratch according to the theme provided.
is an annual robotics competition for 16-18 year-olds that has run since 2007. It has its roots at the University of Southampton, and has recently spread to Bristol University and Grenoble INP. The competition is run by volunteers, who use funding from sponsors to provide teams with a kit, as well as run the competition.
is the longest running aerial robotic event, held annually since 1991. This competition involves fully autonomous flying robots performing tasks that, at the time posed, are undemonstrated anywhere world wide. The competition is open to universities and has had missions involving ground object capture and transfer, hazardous waste location and identification, disaster scene search and rescue, and remote surveillance of building interiors by fully autonomous robots launched from 3 km. In 2008 an $80,000 prize was awarded. Typically a prize of $10,000 is offered, and increases by $10,000 for every year that the competition challenge goes uncompleted.
has been running since 2007. There are multiple events for different competitor levels. The open category competition is an autonomous search and rescue mission with a large target area and tens of kilometers of required flight range. It is an annual event that is held in Australia and is organized by Australian Research Centre for Aerospace Automation
, Queensland Government
and Boeing Australia Limited
. The 2009 prize fund is AU$70,000 with a AU$50,000 grand prize for the open category, making it the biggest current unmanned aerial robot competition.
(MAV) events have been sponsored by various organizations including the University of Florida
, the U.S. Army, French DGA
, Indian Ministry of Defense, and others over the past decade. For example, the International Micro Air Vehicle conferences (IMAVs) always includes various competitions in which specific capabilities are demonstrated and missions are performed. The goal of most competitions is to stimulate research on full autonomy of the micro air vehicles. Prizes range up to an aggregate value of $600,000 in 2008.
Robot
A robot is a mechanical or virtual intelligent agent that can perform tasks automatically or with guidance, typically by remote control. In practice a robot is usually an electro-mechanical machine that is guided by computer and electronic programming. Robots can be autonomous, semi-autonomous or...
s have to accomplish a given task. Usually they have to beat other robots in order to become the best one.
Most competitions are for schools but as time goes by, several professional competitions are arising.
There is a wide variety of competitions for robot
Robot
A robot is a mechanical or virtual intelligent agent that can perform tasks automatically or with guidance, typically by remote control. In practice a robot is usually an electro-mechanical machine that is guided by computer and electronic programming. Robots can be autonomous, semi-autonomous or...
s of various types. The following examples describe a few of the higher profile events.
DARPA Grand Challenge
The DARPA Grand ChallengeDARPA Grand Challenge
The DARPA Grand Challenge is a prize competition for driverless vehicles, funded by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, the most prominent research organization of the United States Department of Defense...
was a rally style race for driverless cars. The unclaimed 2004 prize for navigating through the Mojave Desert was $1,000,000. The farthest any participant got was only 7.4 miles. However, the 2005 prize of $2,000,000 was claimed by Stanford University
Stanford University
The Leland Stanford Junior University, commonly referred to as Stanford University or Stanford, is a private research university on an campus located near Palo Alto, California. It is situated in the northwestern Santa Clara Valley on the San Francisco Peninsula, approximately northwest of San...
. In this race, five autonomous vehicles crossed the finish line.
The 2007 competition pitted the vehicles against a mock-urban course with live traffic obstacles. Six vehicles crossed the finish line. Cash prizes were $2,000,000 for First Place, $1,000,000 for Second Place, and $500,000 for Third Place. DARPA believes that autonomous vehicle technology will continue to rapidly develop without further contests so the race series has ended.
The race was to help develop technology required by the US Congress to be installed on US military land combat vehicles "as soon as possible and before 2015." Accomplishing the conversion of one third of the US Army's one million vehicles to driverless operation still represents a significant challenge. Other branches of the US armed forces have similar numbers of land vehicles to convert. Congress has also set deadlines for air and sea vehicle conversions.
The social benefit of preventing traffic fatalities by applying DARPA Grand Challenge robotics to land transportation is significant. Military use of this technology is unofficially estimated at being able to save one soldiers life a day. Civilian use of this technology in cars, busses, and trucks is estimated by the US Department of Transportation as being able to save 166 lives a day on US roadways. To put the figures into perspective, the number of traffic fatalities we are currently experiencing is equal to one commercial airliner crashing every day with a total loss of life or the complete loss of an entire US town every year. Statistics from the CDC indicate for ages 0 to 49, the age group most often killed in preventable traffic accidents, that "curing traffic accidents" as a cause of death would save more lives in that age group than curing cancer would.
AUVSI Foundation's Intelligent Ground Vehicle Competition (IGVC)
Held annually since 1992, The IGVC challenges college student teams to develop an autonomous ground vehicle that must navigate a complicated obstacle course, complete with an extensive list of mobility and design requirements. Partnerships between students and industry leaders enable the competition to not only serve as a unique educational experience, but also a way to get an inside view of design challenges and establish connections with potential mentors or future employers.European Land Robot Trial
The European Land-Robot TrialEuropean Land-Robot Trial
The European Land-Robot Trial is a European event which demonstrates the abilities of modern robots.The ELROB is not a competition, like the US DARPA Grand Challenge, but a pure demonstration of what European robotics is able to achieve today. The scenarios are designed to simulate real world...
is a demonstration of the abilities of modern robotics. Its directed towards security and defence robots and aimed at European participants from both academic and commercial backgrounds. Its held annually alternating between a civilian and a military version each year on different places around Europe.
OFF Road Robotics Competition
The competition is organized by the Robot Association of Finland.The goal is to build a robot which is able to move without human help off road. The competition is held annually at the mid-summer Jämi Fly In air show in Finland.
The competition track is randomly selected 10 minutes before competition by the judge, marked with four wooden sticks to make a 200 meter track. The track consists of sand roads and fields containing bushes and rocks.
The robots must run outside the sticks from start to finish without human assistance as fast as possible. YouTube movies and pictures from the 2007 and 2008 competitions are available.
Centennial Challenges
The Centennial ChallengesCentennial Challenges
The Centennial Challenges are NASA space competition prize contests for non-government-funded technological achievements by American teams.-Current Challenges:...
are NASA
NASA
The National Aeronautics and Space Administration is the agency of the United States government that is responsible for the nation's civilian space program and for aeronautics and aerospace research...
prize contests for non-government funded technological achievements, including robotics, by US citizens.
International Autonomous Robot Racing Challenge (IARRC) 2010
Student teams from around the world compete head-to-head in an outdoor racing competition, where small-scale robots race against other robots to the finish line, without any human guidance or control. Their skills are put to test in a static judging event, a drag race and a circuit race event, where these autonomous vehicles try to navigate around obstacles and obey the traffic rules. These robots are finding their way in applications such as space exploration, mining, search and rescue, remote sensing and automotive inspection. Some are even becoming common around the home for routine tasks, such as vacuuming and mowing lawns. In the future, these robots may even park and drive cars!Robot Racing is an effort to promote research in autonomous mobile robotics technology in a structure that is challenging and exciting, for both the competitors and spectators. The competition provides students with real-world, hands-on engineering design challenges, including components of mechanical, computer, control software, and system integration. Students work together to design and build robotic vehicles that can navigate twisting, obstacle-filled courses without any human guidance or control. Everyone must work together to design and build a robot that integrates advanced control theory, machine vision, and electronics into a vehicle designed to handle rough terrain.
Robot Racing 2010 will take place on July 24, 2010 from 9am to 7pm at the St. Denis Stadium, University of Windsor, 2555 College Ave., Windsor, ON N9B3P4. Up to CAD $5000.00 in awards are offered. Compete or come take part in the action! Admission is free. Visit the website http://www.robotracing.ca for more information.
RoboRAVE International
Autonomous robots using any platform compete in one of two robot challenges: line following to deliver payload or search for lit candles to extinguish. Teams (2-4 kids) compete in one of three age divisions: Elementary (grades 3-5), Middle (grades 6-8), or High (grades 9-12) from anywhere in the world. Points are awarded at the competition for robot performance as well as before the event for work submitted in their engineering reports, video documentation, blogging entries, and securing a corporate partnership letter and logo. Started in 2001 by three New Mexico educators with 24 students and 12 robots, the 2010 event hosted over 230 robots with almost 800 students. More information is available at www.roborave.org.RoboGames
Recognized by the Guinness Book of World Records as the "World's Largest Robot Competition", the RoboGamesRoboGames
RoboGames is an annual robot contest held in San Mateo, California. The most recent RoboGames was held April 15–17, 2011.RoboGames is the world's largest open robot competition...
(formerly ROBOlympics) host over 70 different events and are modeled on the human Olympics. Robot soccer, sumo, combat, android wrestling, maze solving, fire-fighting, biped races, balancer races, and exoskeletons are a few of the events held. Teams compete from around the world, and RoboGames has no prerequisites for contestants, it is open to anyone regardless of age or affiliation.
BEST Robotics
BESTBEST Robotics
BEST, Boosting Engineering, Science, and Technology, is a national 6-week robotics competition in the United States held each fall, designed to help interest middle school and high school students in possible engineering careers...
, Boosting Engineering, Science, and Technology, is a national 6-week robotics
Robotics
Robotics is the branch of technology that deals with the design, construction, operation, structural disposition, manufacture and application of robots...
competition in the United States
United States
The United States of America is a federal constitutional republic comprising fifty states and a federal district...
held each fall, designed to help interest middle school and high school students in possible engineering
Engineering
Engineering is the discipline, art, skill and profession of acquiring and applying scientific, mathematical, economic, social, and practical knowledge, in order to design and build structures, machines, devices, systems, materials and processes that safely realize improvements to the lives of...
careers. BEST is the only robotics competition for students in this age group that requires no entry fees or kit costs for participation. BEST Robotics has added Regional and National Competitions to their programs with the first National Competition held in Dallas during 2010 in conjunction with the International VEX competition. The next National Competition (now billed as World's BEST) will once again be held in conjunction with the International VEX competition at ESPN's Wide World of Sports Complex at Disney World on April 14–16, 2011.
International METU Robotics Days
The International METU Robotics Days event is hosted annually by the Middle East Technical UniversityMiddle East Technical University
Middle East Technical University is a public technical university located in Ankara, Turkey...
in Ankara, Turkey. It is the longest-running and the most well-known robotic organization in Turkey. The Robotics Days include 8 different categories of competitions as well as lectures, seminars and workshops designed to bring professionals, academics and amateurs together.
IEEE Micromouse competition
In MicromouseMicromouse
Micromouse is an event where small robot mice solve a 16x16 maze. It began in late 1970s, although there is some indication of events in 1950. Events are held worldwide, and are most popular in the UK, U.S., Japan, Singapore, India and South Korea....
competitions, small robots try to solve a maze in the fastest time. The current format involves the "mouse" finding its way to the centre of a 16x16 maze. The competitions have been held since 1979 and are conducted in countries around the world.
FIRST competition
Dean KamenDean Kamen
Dean L. Kamen is an American entrepreneur and inventor from New Hampshire.Born in Rockville Centre, New York, he attended Worcester Polytechnic Institute, but dropped out before graduating after five years of private advanced research for drug infusion pump AutoSyringe...
, Founder of FIRST
First
First or 1st is the ordinal form of the number one.First or 1st may also refer to:* First , minor summit below the Schwarzhorn in the Bernese Alps in Switzerland* First , mountain in Bernese Alps in Switzerland...
(For Inspiration and Recognition of Science and Technology), created the world's leading high school robotics competition in 1992. FIRST provides a varsity-like competitive forum that inspires in young people, their schools and communities in an appreciation of science and technology.
Their robotics competition is a multinational competition that teams professionals and young people to solve an engineering design problem in an intense and competitive way. Their outreach includes the original FIRST Robotics Competition
FIRST Robotics Competition
The FIRST Robotics Competition is an international high school robotics competition organized by FIRST. Each year, teams of high school students compete to build robots weighing up to , not including battery and bumpers, that can complete a task, which changes every year...
(FRC) and the newer FIRST Tech Challenge
FIRST Tech Challenge
The FIRST Tech Challenge , formerly the FIRST Vex Challenge , is a mid-level robotics competition targeted toward high-school aged students. It offers the traditional challenge of a FIRST Robotics competition but with a more accessible and affordable robotics kit...
(FTC) for ages 14–18, the FIRST Lego League
FIRST Lego League
The FIRST® LEGO® League is an international competition organized by FIRST for elementary and middle school students ....
(FLL) for ages 9–14, and Junior FIRST Lego League
Junior FIRST Lego League
Junior FIRST LEGO League is a non-competitive robotics program designed for children ages six to nine. It is one of the programs established by FIRST.Jr.FLL follows the same topics given to FIRST LEGO League...
(Jr.FLL) for ages 6–9. In 2007, there were over 130,000 students and 37,000 adult mentors from around the world involved in at least one of FIRST's competitions. FIRST encourages teams to find adults from outside of the school environment who can pass on their knowledge as mentors. There are thousands of scholarships available to students who participate.
The FLL robots are entirely autonomous; the FTC competition involves separate autonomous and driver control matches; and the FRC competition involves an initial autonomous period (10 or 15 seconds) followed by tele-operated driver control.
RoboCup
RoboCupRoboCup
RoboCup is an international robotics competition founded in 1997. The aim is to develop autonomous soccer robots with the intention of promoting research and education in the field of artificial intelligence...
(robocup.org) is a competitive organization dedicated to developing a team of fully autonomous humanoid robots that can win against the human world soccer champion team by the year 2050. There are many different leagues ranging from computer simulation
Computer simulation
A computer simulation, a computer model, or a computational model is a computer program, or network of computers, that attempts to simulate an abstract model of a particular system...
, to full-size humanoid robots.
It contains three competitions:
- soccer - two+ robots per team play autonomously in a game of soccer
- rescue - an obstacle course in which a robot must follow a line to retrieve an object, and bring it back to safety as fast as possible
- dance - robots are designed to dance to music and are judged on criteria such as creativity and costumes
As is the case with RoboCup
RoboCup
RoboCup is an international robotics competition founded in 1997. The aim is to develop autonomous soccer robots with the intention of promoting research and education in the field of artificial intelligence...
, all robots are designed and developed solely by the students and act autonomously without any form of remote control or human intervention.
RoboCupJunior - RCJ (rcj.robocup.org) is the grade-school level from this world renounced A.I intensive RoboCup game which launched its first official competitive game in 1997. This initiative is to foster the learning in artificial intelligence and robotics research by providing a standard problem where a wide range of technologies can be integrated and examined.
RCJ's game environment is filled with variable elements. In other words, dimensions and locations of objects are unknown in the most part of the game. Therefore, participants must focus on robot's self-awareness of the environment with various sensors and needs very robust programming skill.
Even though RCJ is a grade-level participation game, it demands high aptitude in abstract thinking, especially in programming the robot's intelligence to handle variable elements on the game. It allows its students to refine project outcomes over time with more sophisticated algorithms and hardware improvement without performing similar routines every year.
SAURO
Sakarya University Robotics Competition(SAURO) is a robotics competition hosted by Sakarya UniversitySakarya University
Sakarya University is located in Sakarya, Turkey. It is one of the most popular universities of Turkey. Since there is a large student body, the city of Sakarya is influenced by the university. It was founded as Sakarya Engineering and Architecture in 1970. It renamed as Sakarya State Engineering...
since 2009. The organization is open to undergraduates, graduates and high school students.
Botball Educational Robotics
BotballBotball
Botball is an educational robotics program that focuses on engaging middle and high school aged students in team-oriented robotics competitions. Thousands of children and young adults participate in Botball’s program...
is a robotics competition for middle and high school students. Organized by the KISS Institute for Practical Robotics, Botball encourages participants to work constructively within their team building basic communication, problem solving, design, and programming skills. Each team builds one or more (up to four) robots that will autonomously move scoring objects into scoring positions.
Mobile Autonomous Systems Laboratory competition (Maslab)
The Mobile Autonomous Systems Laboratory, or Maslab, is a university-level vision-based autonomous robotics competition. The competition is open to students of the Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyMassachusetts Institute of Technology
The Massachusetts Institute of Technology is a private research university located in Cambridge, Massachusetts. MIT has five schools and one college, containing a total of 32 academic departments, with a strong emphasis on scientific and technological education and research.Founded in 1861 in...
(MIT) and requires multithreaded applications of image processing, robotic movements, and target ball deposition. The robots are run with Ubuntu Linux and run on an independent OrcBoard platform that facilitates sensor-hardware additions and recognition.
Annual fire-fighting home robot contest
Trinity College (Connecticut)Trinity College (Connecticut)
Trinity College is a private, liberal arts college in Hartford, Connecticut. Founded in 1823, it is the second-oldest college in the state of Connecticut after Yale University. The college enrolls 2,300 students and has been coeducational since 1969. Trinity offers 38 majors and 26 minors, and has...
also has an annual firefighting robot contest which is participated by high schools and colleges from around the world including from countries like Israel and China. This is the largest, public robotics competition held in the U.S. that is open to entrants of any age, ability or experience from anywhere in the world http://cs.wellesley.edu/~rds/rds01/resources.html#competitions/. The 14th Annual Trinity College Fire-Fighting Home Robot Contest was held on the Trinity campus in Hartford, Connecticut on April 14–15 in 2007. One new event in the concept division was added to the 2007 competition, which is the baby-finding contest. Participants will have to find both the flame and the simulated baby, extinguish the former and announce (or bring it to people's attention somehow) when it finds the latter in the expert division. In the concept division, simply finding the baby and notifying the people is sufficient. Check the event website for contest details.
Duke Annual Robo-Climb Competition (DARC)
Hosted by Duke UniversityDuke University
Duke University is a private research university located in Durham, North Carolina, United States. Founded by Methodists and Quakers in the present day town of Trinity in 1838, the school moved to Durham in 1892. In 1924, tobacco industrialist James B...
, the Duke Annual Robo-Climb Competition (DARC) challenges students to create innovative wall-climbing robot
Robot
A robot is a mechanical or virtual intelligent agent that can perform tasks automatically or with guidance, typically by remote control. In practice a robot is usually an electro-mechanical machine that is guided by computer and electronic programming. Robots can be autonomous, semi-autonomous or...
s that can ascend vertical surfaces. The competition, which will be held on Duke's campus in Durham, North Carolina
Durham, North Carolina
Durham is a city in the U.S. state of North Carolina. It is the county seat of Durham County and also extends into Wake County. It is the fifth-largest city in the state, and the 85th-largest in the United States by population, with 228,330 residents as of the 2010 United States census...
, will allow students to showcase their wall-climbing technology in an international forum and encourage students to network with industry leaders.
AAAI Grand Challenges
The two AAAI Grand Challenges focus on human robot interactionHuman robot interaction
Human–robot interaction is the study of interactions between humans and robots. It is often referred as HRI by researchers. Human–robot interaction is a multidisciplinary field with contributions from human–computer interaction, artificial intelligence, robotics, natural language understanding, and...
, with one being a robot attending and delivering a conference talk, the other being operator-interaction challenges in rescue robotics.
ITURO
Istanbul Technical University Robot Olymipics (abbreviated as ITURO) is a robotics Olympics hosted by Istanbul Technical UniversityIstanbul Technical University
Istanbul Technical University is an international technical university located in Istanbul, Turkey. It is the world's third oldest technical university dedicated to engineering sciences as well as social sciences recently, and is one of the most prominent educational institutions in Turkey...
since 2007. The organization is open to undergraduates, graduates and high school students.
Robofest
RobofestRobofest
Robofest is a competition for 5-12 graders. It is similar to FIRST Lego League , but while FLL limits the student's robots to Lego Mindstorms robots, Robofest allows the student to use any robotics system in some of the events. Also, in FLL students are only allowed to use parts manufactured by...
is an annual robotics competition originated at Lawrence Technological University
Lawrence Technological University
Lawrence Technological University, also known as Lawrence Tech or simply LTU, is a private university located in Southfield, Michigan. The school offers undergraduate, masters, and doctoral programs in engineering, science, mathematics, architecture, graphic design, and business...
in 2000 for students in grades 5 to 12. Robofest challenges student teams, to design, build, and program fully autonomous robots. The aim is to promote student mastery of mathematics and science through enjoyable activity. The competition categories in junior and senior age divisions in Robofest are games, creative exhibitions, pentathlon, sumo, and fashion show. The Robofest name is also used by several other organizations worldwide.
Collegiate Robofest
The Collegiate Robofest is also organized by Lawrence Technological UniversityLawrence Technological University
Lawrence Technological University, also known as Lawrence Tech or simply LTU, is a private university located in Southfield, Michigan. The school offers undergraduate, masters, and doctoral programs in engineering, science, mathematics, architecture, graphic design, and business...
and is open to professionals, hobbyists, college students and advanced high school students. The current competition category is the "Mini Urban Challenge" using a PC-based robot with a camera called L2Bot.
International Robot Olympiad (IRO)
Robot game for children ages 9 – 17. Split essentially to the standard category (building robot from scratch and solve a problem within 2–3 hours) and the creative category (project based, bring your design, reports, and research and show it - exhibition style). The committee are experts from various universities around the world, with the purpose of promoting innovation and education.Rat's Life robot programming contest
This contest is organized to promote research results and stimulate further interest in bio-inspired robotics control. The participation to the contest is open to anyone and free of charge. Contestants can download a free version of the WebotsWebots
Webots is a professional robot simulator widely used for educational purposes.The Webots project started in 1996, initially developed by Dr. Olivier Michel at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Lausanne, Switzerland....
software for simulating a robotic scenario where two rat robots compete for survival in a maze-like environment. The developed robot controllers can be transferred in real e-puck robots roaming an interactive LEGO
Lego
Lego is a line of construction toys manufactured by the Lego Group, a privately held company based in Billund, Denmark. The company's flagship product, Lego, consists of colorful interlocking plastic bricks and an accompanying array of gears, minifigures and various other parts...
maze. This competition is now widely used for teaching.
ABU RoboCon
An annual robot contest which started in 2002 for university, college and polytechnic students in the Asia-Pacific region. Under a common set of rules, participants compete with their peers from other countries with hand-made robots. This contest aims to create friendship among young people with similar interests, as well as help advance engineering and broadcasting technologies in the region. The event broadcasts in countries/region through ABUAsia-Pacific Broadcasting Union
The Asia-Pacific Broadcasting Union , formed in 1964, is a non-profit, professional association of broadcasting organisations. It currently has 200 members in 57 countries and regions, reaching a potential audience of about 3 billion people....
member broadcasters.
The contest is hosted by a different broadcaster/country every year.
Defcon Robot Contest (DefconBots)
The DEF CONDEF CON
DEF CON is one of the world's largest annual computer hacker conventions, held every year in Las Vegas, Nevada...
, world's largest hacker convention hosts a robotic competition called DefconBots
Defcon Robot Contest
The Defcon Robot Contest is a robotics competition which is held at the annual Defcon computer security conference in Las Vegas.-Defcon 12 :...
. This competition's objective has changed a couple of times. From 2006 to 2008 the goal was to build an autonomous stationary robot to shoot down the targets. Previous competitions included line following and transporting ping-pong balls across the arena. The contest is open to everyone.
Eurobot
EurobotEurobot
Eurobot is an international amateur robotics contest, created in 1998. It is open to teams of young people, organised either in student projects or in independent clubs.Eurobot takes place in Europe but also welcomes countries from other continents....
is an annual robot contest taking place in Europe. The teams must build autonomous robots, that collect elements on a given playing area with new rules every year.
The final round is hosted by different countries every year. The best three teams from every country may take part in the international final.
UBBOTS competition
UBBOTS is an annual robot exhibition taking place at Babes-Bolyai University, Cluj-NapocaCluj-Napoca
Cluj-Napoca , commonly known as Cluj, is the fourth most populous city in Romania and the seat of Cluj County in the northwestern part of the country. Geographically, it is roughly equidistant from Bucharest , Budapest and Belgrade...
, Romania
Romania
Romania is a country located at the crossroads of Central and Southeastern Europe, on the Lower Danube, within and outside the Carpathian arch, bordering on the Black Sea...
. The teams have to create a robot that helps humans and simplify their life.
National Engineering Robotics Contest
Every year, hundreds of robots from institutions Pakistan-wide gather at the College of Electrical and Mechanical EngineeringCollege of Electrical and Mechanical Engineering
The College of Electrical and Mechanical Engineering or is the largest constituent college of the National University of Sciences and Technology, Pakistan.- Location :...
, NUST
NUST
NUST may refer to:*Nanjing University of Science and Technology, Nanjing, China*National University of Sciences and Technology, Pakistan in Islamabad, Pakistan*National University of Science and Technology, Zimbabwe in Bulawayo, Zimbabwe...
Islamabad,Pakistan to participate in the National Engineering Robotics Contest (NERC).
The Contest provides a platform to students to come forth with novel engineering ideas.
Over 155 teams participating in NERC 2010.
Contestants have to fabricate their robot right from the scratch according to the theme provided.
Student Robotics
Student RoboticsStudent Robotics
Student Robotics is a volunteer based organisation that runs an annual robotics competition for 16-18 year-olds .The group was founded at the University of Southampton in 2006, and is still primarily run by students from the University of Southampton today. Students at the University of Bristol...
is an annual robotics competition for 16-18 year-olds that has run since 2007. It has its roots at the University of Southampton, and has recently spread to Bristol University and Grenoble INP. The competition is run by volunteers, who use funding from sponsors to provide teams with a kit, as well as run the competition.
AUVSI Foundation and ONR's 13th International Autonomous Underwater Vehicle (AUV) Competition
Launched in 1997 and co-sponsored by the Office of Naval Research (ONR), the goal of this competition is to advance the development of Autonomous Underwater Vehicles (AUVs) by challenging a new generation of engineers to perform realistic missions in an underwater environment. This event also serves to foster ties between young engineers and the organizations developing AUV technologies. Open to high school and college teams.AUVSI Foundation and ONR's 3rd International Autonomous Surface Vehicle (ASV) Competition
The Autonomous Surface Vehicle Competition (ASVC) is a student competition based around unmanned boats operating under rules of the waterway. This includes littoral area navigation, channel following and autonomous docking. This is typically done with computer vision, multi-sensor fusion techniques, proactive and reactive path planning, and machine learning approaches using embedded systems within the vehicle. Open to high school and college teams.Marine Advanced Technology Education Center Competition
The Marine Advanced Technology Education (MATE) Center sponsors an annual international ROV competition; the first competition was held in 2002. The competition is open to middle school (grades 5-8), high school (grades 9-12), community and technical college, and four-year university students as well as home-schooled students of comparable grade levels.AUVSI Foundation's International Aerial Robotics Competition (IARC)
The AUVSI Foundation's International Aerial Robotics CompetitionInternational Aerial Robotics Competition
The International Aerial Robotics Competition began in 1991 on the campus of the Georgia Institute of Technology and is the longest running university-based robotics competition in the world...
is the longest running aerial robotic event, held annually since 1991. This competition involves fully autonomous flying robots performing tasks that, at the time posed, are undemonstrated anywhere world wide. The competition is open to universities and has had missions involving ground object capture and transfer, hazardous waste location and identification, disaster scene search and rescue, and remote surveillance of building interiors by fully autonomous robots launched from 3 km. In 2008 an $80,000 prize was awarded. Typically a prize of $10,000 is offered, and increases by $10,000 for every year that the competition challenge goes uncompleted.
AUVSI Foundation's Student Unmanned Air System (SUAS) Competition
The SUAS Competition, aimed at stimulating and fostering interest in unmanned air systems, technologies and careers, is focused on engaging students in a challenging mission. It requires the design, integration and demonstration of a system capable of conducting air operations to include autonomous flight, navigation of a specified course and use of onboard payload sensors. Additionally, students are required to submit technical journal papers and make oral presentations.UAV Outback Challenge
The UAV Outback ChallengeUAV Outback Challenge
The UAV Challenge - Outback Rescue, often referred to as simply the UAV Outback Challenge or UAV Challenge, began in 2007 and has been held every year since. The event is aimed at promoting the civilian use of unmanned aerial vehicles and the development of low-cost systems that could be used for...
has been running since 2007. There are multiple events for different competitor levels. The open category competition is an autonomous search and rescue mission with a large target area and tens of kilometers of required flight range. It is an annual event that is held in Australia and is organized by Australian Research Centre for Aerospace Automation
Australian Research Centre for Aerospace Automation
Australian Research Centre for Aerospace Automation is a collaboration between the CSIRO ICT Centre, Autonomous Systems Lab, and the School of Engineering Systems at the Queensland University of Technology ....
, Queensland Government
Government of Queensland
The Government of Queensland is commonly known as the "Queensland Government".The form of the Government of Queensland is prescribed in its Constitution, which dates from 1859, although it has been amended many times since then...
and Boeing Australia Limited
Boeing Australia
Boeing Australia Holdings Pty Ltd, or simply Boeing Australia, is Boeing's largest footprint outside the United States. Established in 2002, the company oversees its seven wholly owned subsidiaries, consolidating and co-ordinating Boeing’s businesses and operations in Australia.Boeing has played an...
. The 2009 prize fund is AU$70,000 with a AU$50,000 grand prize for the open category, making it the biggest current unmanned aerial robot competition.
Micro Air Vehicle Events
A series of micro air vehicleMicro air vehicle
A micro air vehicle , or micro aerial vehicle , is a class of unmanned aerial vehicles that has a size restriction and may be autonomous. Modern craft can be as small as 15 centimetres...
(MAV) events have been sponsored by various organizations including the University of Florida
University of Florida
The University of Florida is an American public land-grant, sea-grant, and space-grant research university located on a campus in Gainesville, Florida. The university traces its historical origins to 1853, and has operated continuously on its present Gainesville campus since September 1906...
, the U.S. Army, French DGA
Délégation Générale pour l'Armement
The Direction générale de l’armement, which could be translated as “General Directorate for Armament”, or DGA, is the French Government Defence procurement agency responsible for the program management, development and purchase of weapon systems for the French military.-Armament programs...
, Indian Ministry of Defense, and others over the past decade. For example, the International Micro Air Vehicle conferences (IMAVs) always includes various competitions in which specific capabilities are demonstrated and missions are performed. The goal of most competitions is to stimulate research on full autonomy of the micro air vehicles. Prizes range up to an aggregate value of $600,000 in 2008.
External links
- Robot Competition FAQ
- European Land-Robot Trial Website
- Finnish Robotics Association
- METU Robotics Days Main Page
- Sakarya University Robotics Competition Main Page
- Maslab - Advanced IAP Robotics Competition
- Annual fire-fighting home robot contest
- Duke Annual Robo-Climb Competition's Website
- ITURO Website
- Rat's Life robot programing contest
- AUVSI Foundation's Student Competitions (Air, Ground, Surface and Underwater)
- ROV Competition
- MAV 08
- UBBOTS competition