Mike Brady Research Symposium September 16, 2010 The Year(s) of the Robot John Hollerbach University...

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Mike Brady Research Symposium September 16, 2010 The Year(s) of the Robot John Hollerbach University of Utah

Transcript of Mike Brady Research Symposium September 16, 2010 The Year(s) of the Robot John Hollerbach University...

Page 1: Mike Brady Research Symposium September 16, 2010 The Year(s) of the Robot John Hollerbach University of Utah.

Mike Brady Research SymposiumSeptember 16, 2010

The Year(s) of the Robot

John HollerbachUniversity of Utah

Page 2: Mike Brady Research Symposium September 16, 2010 The Year(s) of the Robot John Hollerbach University of Utah.

The MIT Years: Highlights

• Year of the Robot• Books in robotics• ISRR• IJRR

Page 3: Mike Brady Research Symposium September 16, 2010 The Year(s) of the Robot John Hollerbach University of Utah.

Robotics in the 1970sRobotics was not generally considered a

separate, respectable scientific endeavor.• Heavy orientation towards industrial

robotics.• Limitations in envisaged and realized robot

capabilities.• No research journal dedicated to robotics.• No high-level international research

conference in robotics.

Page 4: Mike Brady Research Symposium September 16, 2010 The Year(s) of the Robot John Hollerbach University of Utah.

Year of the Robot (1981-82)

Accelerate the field of robotics via:• Source book on manipulation• Start a journal• Start an annual or biannual conference• Bring in outside experts for extended stays• Outline an educational program• Build a robot hand

Page 5: Mike Brady Research Symposium September 16, 2010 The Year(s) of the Robot John Hollerbach University of Utah.

A source book with sections:• Dynamics• Trajectory planning• Compliance and force control• Feedback control• Spatial planningEach section had a substantial introduction that served as a tutorial.Papers by 19 top authors were retyped into a common format.Published in 1982• Translated into Japanese

Page 6: Mike Brady Research Symposium September 16, 2010 The Year(s) of the Robot John Hollerbach University of Utah.

Utah/MIT Dextrous Hand

• Collaboration with Steve Jacobsen (Utah)• Begun in 1981, completed in 1987• 12 copies were made• Pneumatic, tendon-driven actuation

Page 7: Mike Brady Research Symposium September 16, 2010 The Year(s) of the Robot John Hollerbach University of Utah.

Updated source book in robotics• Published in 1989• 16 commissioned papers by leading experts• Last funding from SDF

Page 8: Mike Brady Research Symposium September 16, 2010 The Year(s) of the Robot John Hollerbach University of Utah.

1981: Representative Problems in Robotics

• Recognizing objects in the real world.• Grasping arbitrary objects.• Two-armed, cooperative manipulation.• Learning from experience.

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2010: DARPA BAA on Mobile Manipulation

• Recognizing objects in the real world.• Grasping arbitrary objects.• Two-armed, cooperative manipulation.• Learning from experience.

Page 10: Mike Brady Research Symposium September 16, 2010 The Year(s) of the Robot John Hollerbach University of Utah.

Visitors and Workshops

Renowned visitors spent from weeks to months at the MIT AI Lab.

• Harry Asada, Rod Brooks, Roy Featherstone, John Luh, Ken Salisbury, Russ Taylor

Workshop on Dextrous Robot Hands.• Asada, Flateau, Harmon, Hillis, Hogan, Jacobsen,

Purbrick, Raibert, Roth, Ruoff, Salisbury

Page 11: Mike Brady Research Symposium September 16, 2010 The Year(s) of the Robot John Hollerbach University of Utah.

ISRR 1983: Bretton Woods• Funded initially by SDF• Organized similar to Gordon conferences

Page 12: Mike Brady Research Symposium September 16, 2010 The Year(s) of the Robot John Hollerbach University of Utah.

1983 Bretton Woods Brady and Paul

1984 Kyoto Hanafusa and Inoue

1985 Gouvieux Faugeras and Giralt

1987 Santa Cruz Bolles and Roth

1989 Tokyo Miura and Arimoto

1993 Pittsburgh Kanade and Paul

1995 Herrsching Giralt and Hirzinger

1997 Shonan, Japan Shirai and Hirose

1999 Snowbird Hollerbach and Koditschek

2001 Lorne, Australia Jarvis and Zelinsky

2003 Siena Dario and Chatila

2005 San Francisco Thrun, Brooks and Durrant-Whyte

2007 Hiroshima Kaneko and Nakamura

2009 Lucerne Siegwart and Hirzinger

2011 Flagstaff Christensen and Khatib

Page 13: Mike Brady Research Symposium September 16, 2010 The Year(s) of the Robot John Hollerbach University of Utah.

ISRR 1983 Participants

Page 14: Mike Brady Research Symposium September 16, 2010 The Year(s) of the Robot John Hollerbach University of Utah.

ISRR 1985: Gouvieu

Page 15: Mike Brady Research Symposium September 16, 2010 The Year(s) of the Robot John Hollerbach University of Utah.
Page 16: Mike Brady Research Symposium September 16, 2010 The Year(s) of the Robot John Hollerbach University of Utah.
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IJRR founded in 1982.- Mike Brady and Richard (Lou) Paul are inaugural editors.- Editorial Board is similar to ISRR organizing committee.- Published by MIT Press.

First journal dedicated toRobotics Research- 2001 First MM publishing- 2009 Data set papers

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The Founding of IJRR

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IJRR History

1982 Mike Brady and Lou Paul are the inaugural editors.

1986 Tomas Lozano-Perez replaces Lou Paul.

1988 Number of issues increases from 4 to 6.

1989 Tomas retires, Mike continues as sole editor.

1991 Jennet Batten becomes Managing Editor.

1998 Sage Press buys IJRR from MIT Press, issues increase from 6 to 12.

2000 Mike retires, John Hollerbach becomes editor.

2010 Number of issues increases to 14.

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Jennet Batten: 20 Years as IJRR Managing Editor

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Mike Bradyco-founder and editor 1982-1999

ofThe International Journal of Robotics ResearchA celebration of his achievement on brining the

Journal into existence on the occasion of hisretirement, September, 2010

1999 Editorial Board Testimonials