The
World Cup is not the only soccer tourna ment held every four years.
Teams of soccer-playing robots competed at RoboCup, at an
international exhibition of robotics and artificial intelligence
technology held in Fukuoka, Japan.
The robots, about the size and shape of a large
coffee can, played in one of five mechanical soccer matches at the
event. A team, dubbed the ‘Robobcats,’ was one of just a few around
the U. S. A. to qualify for the tournament, which aimed to foster
research in robotics and artificial intelligence (AI). About 1,000
scientists and engineers representing 200 teams and 30 countries
participated in RoboCup, which attracted about 100,000 visitors.
According to the organisers, the RoboCup is not
just fun and games. Apart from entertainment value, the technology
developed to make machines play soccer could also be used to create
a fleet of automatic robots that could search for survivors at
disaster sites, serve as security guards, receptionists or function
in other situations too risky for humans, going into dangerous
situations, cleaning up nuclear waste or even working as domestic
help. The tournament was the culmination of three years of research
into the complex task of developing computer software that could
help the robots ‘think’ of strategies to kick the ball through the
opponent’s goal. Several teachers and students from various
engineering and scientific fields have struggled to achieve the
goal. The answer lay in a powerful computer and a watchful camera.
The robots moved on three multi-directional wheels and were equipped
with a metal ‘kicker’ to push an orange-sized golf ball past the
goalkeeper. A light-sensitive video camera mounted in the ceiling
above the playing field, about the size of a Ping-Pong table,
transmitted the location of the players back to a computer. The
machine employs artificial intelligence to devise the best playing
strategy.
The programme relies on a concept called
‘distributed computing’ in which unused computer power from the idle
robots is sent to the robots that are actively racing for the shot.
Robotics has several potential practical applications. NASA is
adapting technology to establish a network of space satellites known
as ‘Sensor Web’ that will collect, process and store scientific data
on the earth’s atmosphere, land and oceans.
Engineers would like to use the technology for
other applications as well, including a fleet of mobile robots that
could be embedded in buildings to respond to emergency situations,
either by transmitting information to rescue crews or even dousing
fires. They are also beginning to explore the idea of using a team
of robot dogs ‘trained’ to assist people with Alzheimer’s disease.
The software could also be used to co-ordinate the flights of
unmanned airborne vehicles (UAV), experimental aircraft that could
be used for surveillance at international borders or to survey
disaster sites. RoboCup had an exhibition of robot rescue
technology, in which teams of robots were used to find victims at
disaster sites.
The automobile manufacturer Honda Motor Co. Ltd.
of Japan has developed ‘Asimo’, a human-like robot, which could one
day perform useful tasks for its human masters. Honda is already
leasing out Asimo to International Business Machines Corporation and
other companies as a high-tech receptionist and hospitality robot.
While Asimo is still used primarily for entertainment, its creators
hope that it will some day be a useful household companion.
Asimo is 120 cm tall, which was the minimum
height a robot needed to move effectively around a home, given the
height of such objects as tabletops, doorknobs and stairs. Honda now
leases Asimo to business houses for $ 152,400 a year. However, in
about 10 years, it would be cheap and smart enough to fetch a glass
of water when asked. The dream of smart machines that serve people
or relieve humans of tiresome work is almost as old as civilisation.
The term ‘robot’ was first used in R. U. R (Rossum’s Universal
Robots), a play by Czech writer Karel Capek. Homer who lived in 800
BC has described walking tripods in the Iliad. In 350 BC,
Aristotle thought about machines that work by "obeying or
anticipating the will of others." However, there was little or no
progress for the next 16 centuries. In 1942, Isaac Asimov, the
world-famous science writer, wrote Runaround, in which he
promulgated the three laws of robotics: A robot may not injure a
human being or, through inaction, allow a human being to come to
harm. A robot must obey the orders given it by human beings, except
where such orders would conflict with the first law. A robot must
protect its own existence as long as such protection does not
conflict with the first or second law. By the year 2050, scientists
hope to develop a team of fully automatic robots that can
beat the human World Cup soccer champions.