17 International Teams Competed in the DARPA Robotics Challenge

17 International Teams Competed in the DARPA Robotics Challenge

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DARPA’s Robotics Challenge (DRC) took place on December 20-21, pitting 17 teams against one another in a series of eight physical challenges. According to the report in Popular Mechanics the competition aims to develop robots that could one day come to the aid of humans in disaster situations.

The Google-owned SCHAFT robot finished first sfter successfully completed the driving challenge. Photo: DARPA
The Google-owned SCHAFT robot finished first sfter successfully completing the driving challenge. Photo: DARPA

Each of the eight tasks, from climbing a ladder to turning a valve, is designed to mimic realistic obstacles that robots would encounter in catastrophes. Few teams are expected to attempt the most challenging task, driving a utility vehicle through a winding course. Teams are awarded points for completing tasks.

Gill Pratt, project manager of DARPA’s Defense Sciences Office, says these trials are meant to gauge where the field of robotics is today and develop a tech baseline for future competitions.

iHLS – Israel Homeland Security

The teams are introduced in the following videos:

I will be thrilled if the best team gets half of the points,” he says. “[In these early trials,] you’re not going to see robots racing to the rescue — you’ll see robots being deliberate to the rescue.”

The teams come from five countries and represent government, academic and commercial organizations. They are competing for DARPA-funded slots in the 2014 DRC Finals; those with independent funding can advance automatically.

China’s team, Intelligent Pioneer, did not make it to the event and will not compete.

These are the tasks the robots had to complete: