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comp.robotics.* Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ) part 3/5

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Kevin Dowling

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Archive-name: robotics-faq/part3
Last Modified: Mon Sep 16 01:00:38 EDT 1996
_________________________________________________________________

This FAQ was compiled and written by Kevin Dowling with numerous
contributions by readers of comp.robotics. Acknowledgements are listed
at the end of the FAQ.

This post, as a collection of information, is Copyright 1995 Kevin
Dowling. Distribution through any means other than regular Usenet
channels must be by permission. The removal of this notice is
forbidden.

This FAQ may be posted to any USENET newsgroup, on-line service, or
BBS as long as it or the section is posted in its entirety and
includes this copyright statement. This FAQ may not be distributed for
financial gain. This FAQ may not be included in commercial collections
or compilations without express permission from the author.

Please send changes, additions, suggestions and questions to:
Kevin Dowling tel: 412.268.8830
Robotics Institute fax: 412.268.5895
Carnegie Mellon University net: [2]ni...@cmu.edu
Pittsburgh, PA 15213 url: [3]http://www.frc.ri.cmu.edu/~nivek

This FAQ may be referenced as:

Dowling, Kevin (1995) "Robotics: comp.robotics Frequently Asked
Questions" Available as a hypertext document at
http://www.frc.ri.cmu.edu/robotics-faq. 90+ pages.
_________________________________________________________________

Last-Modified: Thu Dec 7 16:40:11 1995


[4]Kevin Dowling <ni...@cmu.edu>

References
_________________________________________________________________

[6] What University Programs are there?


[3][6.1] Graduate Programs in Robotics
[4][6.2] Student Who's Who
_________________________________________________________________

Any good four-year school undoubtedly offers robotics courses within
engineering programs. Departments of mechanical and electrical
engineering and computer science are all good candidates for
coursework in Robotics. However, a number of schools have established
track records with a focus on robotics and those are listed here.

_________________________________________________________________

[6.1] Graduate Programs in Robotics

This list is grouped by countries including the United States,
Australia, Canada, Japan, United Kingdom, Sweden and Switzerland. Many
European and Asian universities are not represented and should be.
Please drop me a line if you have information on those that should be
included.

[5]Australia

[6]University of Western Australia

[7]Canada

[8]McGill University
[9]University of Alberta

[10]Finland

[11]Helsinki University of Technology

[12]France

[13]University of Paris

[14]Japan

[15]Waseda University

[16]Sweden

[17]Lulea University of Technology

[18]Switzerland

[19]Swiss Federal Institute of Technology

[20]United Kingdom

[21]Bristol University
[22]Edinburgh University (UK)
[23]Hull University, UK
[24]Reading University, UK
[25]Salford University
[26]University of Birmingham
[27]University of Essex (UK)
[28]University of Manchester
[29]University of Oxford
[30]University of Surrey
[31]University of the West of England at Bristol, U.K.

[32]United States

[33]Boston University
[34]Brandeis University
[35]California Institute of Technology (Caltech)
[36]Carnegie Mellon University (CMU)
[37]Colorado School of Mines
[38]Clemson University
[39]Cornell
[40]Georgia Institute of Technology
[41]Harvard
[42]Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)
[43]New York University (NYU)
[44]North Carolina State University
[45]Northeastern University
[46]Purdue
[47]Rennsalear Polytechnic Institute (RPI)
[48]Stanford University
[49]University of California at Berkeley
[50]University of Iowa
[51]University of Kansas
[52]University of Kentucky
[53]University of Massachusetts
[54]University of Michigan
[55]University of Pennsylvania.
[56]University of Rochester
[57]University of Southern California (USC)
[58]University of Maryland
[59]The University of Texas at Arlington
[60]University of Wisconsin-Madison
[61]University of Utah
[62]Yale University
[63]Wilkes University

_________________________________________________________________

Australia

University of Western Australia

Some neat telerobotic work can be found at
[64]http://telerobot.mech.uwa.edu.au
_________________________________________________________________

Canada

McGill University


Center for Intelligent Machines
McGill University
McConnell Engineering Building, Room 420
3480 University Street
Montreal, Que, Canada H3A 2A7


School of Computer Science
McGill University
McConnell Engineering Building, Room 420
3480 University Street
Montreal, Que, Canada H3A 2A7

There is a web page and ftp archive at [65]http://www.cim.mcgill.ca

The McGill Centre for Intelligent Machines, CIM, was founded in 1985
to provide researchers in robotics, computer vision, speech
recognition, and systems and control with a context in which to pursue
their common goal: the understanding and creation of systems which
exhibit intelligent behaviour. The three main research foci are
perception, robotics and control theory. The Centre now includes
faculty members and graduate students from five departments:
Electrical, Mechanical, Biomedical, and Mining and Metallurgical
Engineering, and the School of Computer Science.

The center itself does not have a degree program, rather students
enroll in one of the associated departments and gain access by being
supervised a faculty member who is also a CIM member. There are
research programs directly related to computer vision, robot
mechanical systems, walking machines, mobile robotics, etc.

CIM Members: J. Angeles, P.R. Belanger, M. Buehler, P.E. Caines, L.
Daneshmend, R. De Mori, G. Dudek, F. Ferrie, J. Hollerbach, V.
Hayward, D. Levanony, M.D. Levine, A. Malowany, H. Michalska, J. Owen,
E. Papadopoulos, M. Verma, S. Whitesides, G. Zames, P.J.
Zsombor-Murray, S.W. Zucker

_________________________________________________________________

University of Alberta


Edmontom, Alberta
Canada T6H 2H1

_Center for Machine Intelligence and Robotics_
Robotics Research Laboratory, Department of Computing Science _Faculty_
Ron Kube
_________________________________________________________________

Finland

_________________________________________________________________

Helsinki University of Technology

Research includes outdoor walking machines, all-terrain autonomous
vehicle and many other projects. See [66]Automation Home Page and
[67]Research Home page

France

_________________________________________________________________

University of Paris

INRIA (Nice) recently started a Phd program in Robotics.
_________________________________________________________________

Japan

[68]Waseda University Tokyo, Japan

Humanoid Research Laboratory (HUREL), Advanced Research Center for
Science and Engineering

[69]Humanoid Project

Sweden

Lulea University of Technology

_Department of Robotics and Automation_


S-971 87 LULEE

WWW: [70]http://www.sm.luth.se/csee/er/sm-roa/
_________________________________________________________________

Switzerland

Swiss Federal Institute of Technology

_The Institute of Robotics_
ETH offers a Postgrad diploma in Mechatronics.

The Institute of Robotics at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology
(ETH) constitutes about 40 members of staff (including Ph.D.
students). The main research theme is Intelligent Interactive
Mechines. That is to say developing intelligent robots that in
cooperation with man solves difficult tasks. The institute takes its
students from the departments of Electrical Engineering, Mechanical
Engineering and Computer Science. Robotics lectures and project work
is offered to undergraduate students. In addition there is the
"Nachdiplom" in mechatronics (somewhere near a M.Sc.) where robotics
is a central theme. For further details on the "Nachdiplom" see below.
Finally there are about 30 Ph.D. students curently registered working
on a variety of themes and projects. Institute facilities include:
several different robot arms including the in house developed modular
robot arm (MODRO), mobile vehicles including the in house developed
modular mobile robot, walking machines, supercomputing facilities,
dedicated vision and signal processing hardware, etc.

The head of the group is Professor G. Schweitzer.


Institute of Robotics
ETH-Center, LEO,
8092 Zurich
Switzerland
tel: (01) 256 35 84 (secretary)
fax: (01) 252 02 76.

The "Nachdiplom" in mechatronics runs over two semesters plus three
months project/thesis work. The lectures covers: robotics, mobile
robotics, micro robots, computer based kinematics and dynamics of
multibody systems, control theory, magnetic bearings, real time
software techniques, information processing with neural networks,
computer vision, and artificial intelligence. The fees are 2400,-
Swiss Franks, founding is available.

_Contact:_


H.-K. Scherrer
Mechatronics postgraduate course
ETH-Centre, LEO B3
8092 Zurich
Switzerland
net:

_________________________________________________________________

United Kingdom

_________________________________________________________________

Edinburgh University


Department of Artificial Intelligence,
5, Forrest Hill,
Edinburgh
EH1 2QL
Scotland

The Department of Artificial Intelligence has robot and vision groups
within it.

Main interests of the robotics group include:
* behaviour-based control of robots (both mobiles and arms)
* hybrid control -- symbolic planning and behaviour-based actions
* learning, both reinforcement and other types implementations of
biological systems eg cricket ears; vertebrate learning models
* active vision
* real-time control
* long survival times
* direct-drive arm control

As well as PhDs by research, the Department offers a one-year, taught,
modular, Masters course in Information Technology for Knowledge-based
Systems where one of the possible specialisations is in robotics and
vision. This course is designed for people without specific AI
background. One module involves the Masters students building and
programming their own robot out of Lego and supplied electronics.
Another module gives hands-on experience with a simple robot arm.

Contact the Admissions Secretary Judith Gordon for information about
courses.

_Principal Researchers_
* John Hallam
autonomous mobiles and survival
* Bob Fisher
vision
* Chris Malcolm
assembly robotics and hybrid systems
* Gillian Hayes
active vision and biological control

_________________________________________________________________

University of Birmingham

Birmingham, England

See [71]School of Computer Science
_________________________________________________________________

University of Essex

_Brooker Laboratory for Intelligent Embedded Systems_


email: rob...@essex.ac.uk


Main interests of the laboratory:
* Behavior-Based Architectures (software and hardware)
* Active Vision
* Collaborative AI (ie multiple agents)
* Fuzzy and Neural Systems
* Virtual Systems (eg robot simulation and telepresence)
* Planning & Learning
* Reliable Robots (ie for inaccessible or hazardous environments)

_Principal Researchers:_
* Victor Callaghan
* Paul Chernett
behavior-based architectures, virtual systems and active vision
* Libor Spacek
active vision and face recognition
* Jim Doran
Collaborative AI
* Chang Wang
fuzzy and neural systems
* Edward Tsang & Sam Steel
planning & learning
* John Standeven &
* Martin Colley
reliable robotic systems

In addition to PhDs by research, there is a one-year, taught, Masters
course in Computer Science where it is possible to undertake robotics,
AI or vision.

Contact csd...@essex.ac.uk for further details of courses or
rob...@essex.ac.uk for information on research. In addition some
useful information on the laboratory can be obtained at
[72]ftp://ftp.essex.ac.uk/pub/robots/SXlab.ps.Z

_________________________________________________________________

University of the West of England at Bristol

(used to be Bristol Polytechnic)
Undergraduate Robotics is taught as part of undergraduate programs in
engineering courses and as part of a real time computing course. The
engineering department has in its teaching labs Puma, Adept, IBM,
Cincinatti-Milacron and Funac robots.

_Intelligent Autonomous Systems group_
* Yichuang Jin, Will Wray
Neural net control of manipulators, especially stability-based
adaptive control. Comparative modelling of neurocontroller design
for robotics.
* Lawrence Bull, Owen Holland, Chris Melhuish
Behaviour-based mobile robots, collective behaviour, reinforcement
learning and genetic algorithms.

_Intelligent Flexible Assembly Technology (InFACT/ALASCA Group):_
Eureka/FAMOS Projects (EC colaborative project - academic and
Industry) The group has a large gantry based robot designed and built
by the group.
* Farid Dialami, Alan Redford
Advanced Large scale flexible assembly (Peugot cars etc), generic
tooling.
* David Eastlake (hardware), Mike Morgan(software)
Transputer based robot control of co-operating manipulators.
Email:

_________________________________________________________________

Bristol University

_Faculty_
Mr Khodlebandelhoo
* Bi arm research
* Path planning for redundant robots
* Wall climbing robots

_________________________________________________________________

Hull University

_Faculty_
Prof Alan Pugh
* Garment Manufacturing
* Arm/controller design

_________________________________________________________________

University of Manchester

_Department of Computer Science_
The web page below describes research in mobile robotics in the areas
of autonomous competence acquisition, learning by tuition and
navigation. Papers are also available at this site.

[73]http://www.cs.man.ac.uk/robotics

_________________________________________________________________

University of Oxford

_Robotics Research Group_
The Robotics Group currently comprises about seventy academics,
postdoctoral research staff, overseas visitors, and graduate students.
A broad range of topics in advanced robotics is studied in
collaboration with industry and government establishments throughout
Europe.

* Robot Design and Control
A number of projects are concerned with the design and control of
compliant robot arms.
* Parallel Architectures
Real-time sensor-based control of systems such as robot vehicles
is a topic of increasing interest. For low bandwidth sensors such
sonar, the emphasis is on Transputer architectures. For high
bandwidth sensors such as vision, hybrid SIMD/MIMD architectures
are being developed. A rapidly growing effort is concerned with
the design, implementation, and application of neural networks.
Digital and hybrid digital/analog chips have been designed and are
being fabricated. Algorithms and TTL circuits have been
constructed for text-to-speech synthesis.
* Vision and Active Vision
The theory and applications of vision accounts for approximately
one-third of the laboratory's effort. Current projects include
edge detection and texture segmentation and the computation of
visual motion by a parallel algorithm that estimates the optic
flow field.
* Sensors and Sensor Integration
Includes laser rangefinder development in addition to analog and
digital sonar sensors, as well as infrared rangers, have been
developed for the AGV project (below).
* Autonomous Guided Vehicles
Work on a research prototype of a fielded industrial AGV cuts
across many of the separate themes of the laboratory's work. The
goal of the initial project is to equip the AGV with sonar,
infrared, laser ranging, trinocular stereo, and model-based vision
sensors to enable it to avoid unexpected obstacles and to locate
pallets.

_________________________________________________________________

Reading University

_Faculty_
* Prof Kevin Warwick
Using neural nets in robotics and novel control algorithms.

_________________________________________________________________

Salford University

[74]http://WWW.salford.ac.uk/ or robotics work more directly at:
[75]http://WWW.salford.ac.uk/docs/depts/eee/homepage.html _Faculty_
* Dr D.P.Barnes, Dept. Of Electrical and Electronic Engineering,
Mobile Robots Research Group.
Autonomous mobile robot system with a behaviour-based architecture
are designed and built with the intent to study the processes of
cooperation with and without communication. Such an approach has
led us up a number of paths with present work in behaviour
synthesis and evolutionary robotics. Expertise in: Robotics,
Sensors, Communication, Connectionist Systems, Genetic Algorithms
and Genetic Programming. Possible studies in PhD and MSc work and
courses at undergraduate level.
* Ruth Aylett, Information Technology Institute
Robot planning systems, multi-agent systems, robot architectures,
hybrid behavioural/symbolic robots
* Dr D.Caldwell, Dept Of Electrical and Electronic Engineering.
Multi-Functional Tactile Sensing and Feedback (Tele-taction)
Tele-presence of an operator with a full mobile robot with two
manipulator arms, stereo vision and sound. Tactile sensing
datagloves are used to control the manipulators and video camera
is used to move head. Expertise: Manipulators, Sensors,

Tele-presence. Possible studies at PhD and MSc and courses at
undergraduate level.

Dr Francis Nagy
Speech Control of a Puma-560, Control of an 'Inverted Pendulum',
Miniature tactile sensors _Advanced Robotics Research Centre_
* Ultrasonic wrist sensor for collision avoidance
* Controller design
* Stereo Vision

_________________________________________________________________

University of Surrey

Mechatronic Systems and Robotics Research Group _Faculty_
* Prof G A Parker (g.pa...@surrey.ac.uk)
* John Pretlove (j.pre...@surrey.ac.uk)
Primary Areas of Research activity:
* 3D co-ordinate tracking system for robot metrology
* Neural networks and expert systems for vision and inspection
* Active stereo vision for real-time robot arm guidance
* Design of controllable stereo vision systems.
* Open architecture Puma controller
* Mobile robots
* We also offer MSc courses and undergraduate courses in automation,
* control, mechanical engineering and CIM.

_________________________________________________________________

United States

_________________________________________________________________

Boston University

_Dept. of Aerospace and Mechanical Engineering_
_People_


John Baillieul
Control of Mechanical Systems and Mathematical System Theory

Pierre Dupont
Robot Kinematics and Dynamics, Friction Compensation in
Robotics.

Ann Stokes
Theoretical Dynamics and Control

Matt Berkemeier
Legged Robots, Robot Control

_________________________________________________________________

Brandeis University>

Waltham, MA

Brandeis has a program in autonomous agents, focusing on multi--agent
and multi--robot systems and machine learning, headed by Maja Mataric
For details on research directions and a photo of the available robot
herd see: http://www.cs.brandeis.edu/dept/faculty/mataric

For graduate admission information see:
http://www.cs.brandeis.edu/dept/grad-info/application.html

To get more information about the Volen Center for Complex Systems,
about the Computer Science Department, and about other faculty, see:
http://www.cs.brandeis.edu/dept. For more information about the
cognitive science and cognitive neuroscience programs at Brandeis see:
http://fechner.ccs.brandeis.edu/cogsci.html
_________________________________________________________________

California Institute of Technology

Pasadena, CA

Joel Burdick
serpentine manipulation, control

Richard Murray
control of nonholonomic systems, grasping

Pietro Perona
biological and machine vision

For more detailed information on robotics research at Caltech see
[76]http://robby.caltech.edu/
_________________________________________________________________

Carnegie Mellon University (CMU)

Graduate program contact:


Graduate Admissions Coordinator
The Robotics Institute
Carnegie Mellon University
5000 Forbes Avenue
Pittsburgh, PA 15213

[77]The Robotics Institute is the world's largest academic
organization devoted to robotics. The Robotics Institute (RI) has over
45 full-time faculty, over 100 technical staff, 150 graduate students
(90 in the RI program) and 25 visitors and post-docs. The Robotics
Institute is part of CMU's [78]School of Computer Science

The Robotics Institute also offers a [79]Robotics PhD and students
from other programs (e.g. engineering and computer science) also do
research in the Institute. Institute development spans the spectrum
from fundamental and basic research to development and integration of
complete systems for specific applications. Research includes many
aspects of mobile robots, computer integrated manufacturing, rapid
prototyping, sensors, vision, navigation, learning and architectures.
The RI PhD program is comprised of a set of qualifiers and a program
of research leading to a thesis and the degree.

The many centers and laboratories include the [80]National Robotics
Engineering Consortium (NREC), a facility and organization devoted to
technology transfer between laboratory and companies.

Facilities include about a dozen mobile systems with more under design
and construction. Facilities include over 2000m^2 of offices and over
15,000 m^2 of laboratory and highbay space. Facilities available
include many mobile robots, manipulator systems and lots of computer
cycles/person.

_People_

Takeo Kanade
Vision and Autonomous Systems Center

Pradeep Khosla
Advanced Manipulator Laboartory

Matt Mason
Manipulation Laboratory

Tom Mitchell
Learning Robots Lab

Hans Moravec
Mobile Robots Lab

Mel Seigel
Sensors Laboratory (non vision)

Red Whittaker
Field Robotics Center

and many others.....

_________________________________________________________________

Case Western Reserve University

Department of Electrical Engineering and Applied Physics


Glennan Building
10900 Euclid Avenue
Cleveland, Ohio 44106
Phone (216)368-4088
Fax (216)368-2668

See [81]file://alpha.ces.cwru.edu/pub/agents/home.html

Electrical engineering at CWRU is a broad, dynamic field offering a
great diversity of career opportunities in areas such as microwave and
rf communications, microprocessor-based digital control systems,
robotics, solid state microelectronics, signal processing, and
intelligent systems. The Department of Electrical Engineering and
Applied Physics offers Bachelor of Science in Engineering, Master of
Science in Electrical Engineering, Master of Engineering, and Doctor
of Philosophy degree programs which provide preparation for work in
these areas. The department offers a minor in electrical engineering
for bachelor's degree students in other engineering disciplines as
well as a minor in electronics for bachelor's degree students enrolled
in the College of Arts and Science.

_________________________________________________________________

Colorado School of Mines

_Mobile Robotics/Machine Perception Laboratory_
_Department of Mathematical and Computer Sciences_
The Colorado School of Mines is a state university, internationally
renowned in the energy, materials, and resource fields, attracting
outstanding students in a broad range of science and engineering
disciplines. The School of Mines is strongly committed to quality
teaching and research. CSM provides an attractive campus environment,
a collegial atmosphere, relatively small size (3000 students, about
30% in graduate programs), and an ideal location in the foothills of
the Rocky Mountains 13 miles from downtown Denver and an hour from
most ski areas.

The Dept. of Mathematical and Computer Sciences offers BS, MS, and PhD
degrees under the department title. With a faculty of 18 tenured and
tenure track members, the department annually receives roughly a
million dollars in grants; 116 undergraduate students and 70 graduate
students are currently enrolled in ou r degree programs. The computer
science group within the department has a strong focus in AI (symbolic
and neural nets) and database and parallel processing syst ems. The
Mobile Robotics/Machine Perception Laboratory is a facility devoted to
basic and interdisciplinary research, technology transfer, and
hands-on education in artificial intelligence through robotics.
Research and technology transfer efforts concentrate on the reduction
of human risk in hazardous situations, stewardship of the environment,
and/or improvement of the quality of life throug h better
manufacturing processes. Research in the MR/MP laboratory is supported
by NSF, ARPA, NASA, and local industries.

For more information, please send email to Dr. Robin R. Murphy,
rmu...@mines.colorado.edu. Include a brief summary of your
educational (with GPA) and work experience, what your research
interests are, and GRE scores.

_________________________________________________________________

Clemson University (CU)

Graduate program contact:


Robotics and Mechatronics (RAM) Laboratory
Center for Advanced Manufacturing
Clemson University
Clemson SC 29634
Lab Phone: 864-656-6988
Fax: 864-656-7220

For more information browse our web site at
[82]http://crb.eng.clemson.edu or contact:
Dr. Darren Dawson (ECE) [83]dda...@eng.clemson.edu
Tel: (864) 656-5924
Fax: (864) 656-7220
[84]http://crb.eng.clemson. edu/advisor/dawson.htm
Dr. Chris Rahn (ME) [85]cdr...@eng.clemson.edu
Tel: (864) 656-5261
Fax: (864) 656-4435
[86]http://www.eng.clemson .edu/~cdrahn/resume.html

Summary of Laboratory Activities

* Research and Development
* Education
* Technology Transfer
* Classroom/Laboratory Workshops
* Faculty/Student Summer Interns

Electrical and Computer Engineering RAM Personnel

* Darren Dawson, Professor
* John Luh, McQueen Quattlebaum Professor

Mechanical Engineering RAM Personnel

* Chris Rahn, Assistant Professor
* Frank Paul, McQueen Quattlebaum Professor

Approximately 25 Ph.D and Masters Thesis Students from both ECE and ME
departments.

RAM Research Facilities

* Robotics Lab: Seven Robot Stations Including a Dual Robot Arm
Workcell and two Direct Drive Robot Manipulators
* Computational Lab: Cluster of Personal Computers and Workstations
* Union Camp Lab: Motor Drive Equipment, a Magnetic Bearing, and
Real Time Workstations
* Environmental Restoration Lab: Virtual Reality Based Equipment and
Software
* Rapid Isothermal Processing Lab: Three Chemical Vapor Deposition
Testbeds
* Square D Lab: Three Vibration Control Testbeds

RAM Research Thrust Areas

* Advanced Computer-Based Software Interfaces and Position/force
Control Systems for Robot Manipulator Systems
* Dynamic Modeling Techniques and Tension Controllers for High Speed
Transport of Fibers and Webs
* High Precision Position Controllers for Electric Motors and
Magnetic Bearings
* Control Algorithms for Payload Swing Reduction for Overhead Cranes
* Vibration Control Techniques for Flexible Beams and Cables
* Closed-Loop Modeling, Control, Measurement, Techniques for
Semiconductor Manufacturing (Chemical Vapor Deposition)

_________________________________________________________________

Cornell

Ithaca, NY Mechanical Engineering Bruce Donald
_________________________________________________________________

Georgia Institute of Technology

_Atlanta, GA_
_Georgia Institute of Technology Robotics Activities_
See also: [87]MRLHome.html Application study areas include:
* Servo control and low level coordination
* Machine intelligence and high level control
* Design, sensors and actuators
* Human/machine interface

Robot applications are in areas such as manufacturing {K. Lee} poultry
processing {W. Daley, G. McMurray, J.C. Thompson} and nuclear waste
inspection and cleanup {R. Arkin, W. Book, S. Dickerson, T. Collins,
A. Henshaw} are underway.

Several robotics researchers are regularly involved in a student
aerial robot design competition in which concurrent engineering
concepts are being used to tailor the characteristics of the
system.{D. Schrage} This competition, held at Georgia Tech and
sponsored by the Association for Unmanned Vehicle Systems, has been
won by Georgia Tech entries for two of the three years it has been
held.

Current research topics and researchers:
* Long arm control
W. Book
* Parallel actuation of manipulators
K. Lee
* 3DOF direct drive actuator
K. Lee
* Special purpose end-effectors
R. Bohlander, H. Lipk
* Parallel processing computer architectures for robot sensing and
control.
R. Bohlander, C. Alford, T. Collins, A. Henshaw
* Laser generated ultrasound to sense structure of materials
C. Ume
* Gallium arsenide based rad-hard electronics.
W. Hunt
* Autonmous vehicles positioning
S. Dickerson
* Collision avoidance techniques
R. Arkin, W. Book
* Flexible arm control
W. Book
* Two arm coordinated motion.
Alford, Vachtsevanos
* Advanced feedback control, learning control, bounded uncertainty
approach, applications to rigid and flexible manipulators, force
control .
N Sadegh, Y Chen, W. Book
* Architectures, Framework for reactive control and hierarchical
planning, vision feedback, fuzzy logic application
Arkin, D. Lawton, G Vachtsevanos
* Human Computer Interaction
M Kelly, H. Lipkin

_________________________________________________________________

Harvard

Roger Brockett
_________________________________________________________________

Iowa State University

_Iowa Center for Emerging Manufacturing Technology_
_Ames, Iowa 50011_
See also: [88]http:// www.vislab.iastate.edu

Iowa State University has one of the better visualization labs in the
country. The lab consists of mainly mechanical engineers and computer
scientists.

_________________________________________________________________

Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)

Mechanical Engineering and Computer Science both have strong robotics
efforts. Asada, Slotine, Brooks, Raibert and others are known and
respected for their work in direct-drive arm, control techniques,
architectures, running machines etc.

_________________________________________________________________

New York University (NYU)

NYU's Department of Computer Science home page is at:
[89]http://cs.nyu.edu/ _Degrees:_
We offer Ph.D. and MS in computer science. Ph.D. students may work
thesis research in robotics. MS students may work on a thesis (as a
substitute for one course). All graduate students are eligible to
enroll in Advaned Laboratory and work on a project in robotics.
Qualified undergraduates may take Independent Study.

The Department of Computer Science offers graduate and undergraduate
courses in robotics, computer vision, AI and neural computation. There
is also a weekly robotics colloquim For admissions information,
contact kar...@cs.nyu.edu

_Research (1994):_
* Multimedia (Schwartz, Wallace, Perlin) See Below
* 3-D target recognition (Hummel)
* Grasp Metrics (Mishra, Yap)
* Reactive Robotics (Mishra)
* Wavelets and Compression (Mallat)
* Human Body Animation (Perlin)

_Faculty:_
* Ken Perlin (Computer Graphics, Multimedia)
* Jacob T. Schwartz (Robotics, Multimedia, Computational Logic)
* Bud Mishra (Robotics, Theory of Computation)
* Chee Yap (Robotics, Computational Geometry)
* Stephane Mallat (Wavelets, Computer Vision)
* Robert Hummel (Computer Vision)

_What is Multimedia Robotics?_
"Multimedia Robotics" is a new area of computer science concerning new
markets for robotics technology, emphasizing the emerging areas of
virtual reality and telepresence, animation and entertainment, and
bioscience material processing.

Wrench Displays
Force and Torque input/output devices for user interfaces, also
called "haptic displays".

Bioscience Applications
Microrobots in DNA micromanipulation,
Wrench displays for surgical VR training applications,
Microsurgical instruments

Advanced actuators for VR and Multimedia
Scaling theory and dynamics of piezeoelectrics, shape memory
metals, electromagnetics and other new actuator technolgies.

Telepresence
Robotics and the WWW, Video Telephony, Telesensuality

Research underway at NYU represents each of these four areas.

_________________________________________________________________

North Carolina State Univerisity

Raleigh, NC Professor Ren Luo tel: 919.515.5199
_________________________________________________________________

[90]Northeastern University> Boston, MA 02115 The Marine Systems
Engineering Laboratory (MSEL) of Northeastern University is pleased to
announce its presence on the World Wide Web at [91]MSEL Home Page MSEL
is a small, internationally-known lab that focuses on research in
ocean engineering, in particular autonomous underwater vehicles
(AUVs). AUVs are unmanned, untethered submersibles that are capable of
carrying out missions autonomously. MSEL developed one of the first
AUVs, EAVE-EAST. Currently, the EAVE AUVs are in their third
generation, the EAVE-III vehicles. The lab maintains two EAVE-III
vehicles for both single-agent and multiagent research. The lab is
also developing a long-range AUV (LRAUV) for extended full-ocean depth
missions. We have active research programs focusing on intelligent AUV
control, AUV control architectural issues, long-range AUV development
for ocean science applications, and multiple AUV systems and
cooperative distributed problem solving.

[92]Purdue University

West Lafayette, Indiana 47907

Here's a pointer to Purdue's [93]Robot Vision Lab

_Faculty_
* [94]Avi Kak: Vision and mobile robots
* Antti Koivo: Manipulation
* Mirek Skibiniewski: Construction Robotics
* Anthony Maciejewski: Kinematics of redundant robotic arms,
computer graphic techniques for animation, visualization
* George Lee: Robot Control, Fuzzy Logic, Neural Networks
* Akio Kosaka Vision-based navigation for mobile robots

_________________________________________________________________

Rennsalear Polytechnic Institute (RPI)

_Faculty_
* George Saridis
* Arthur Sanderson
* Jon Wenn

About 20 PhD and 30 MS students. Path planning and multi-arm control
are current focus.

_________________________________________________________________

Stanford University


Palo Alto, CA

[95]http://www.stanford.edu/

_Mechanical Engineering:_
* Bernard Roth (kinematics of manipulators)
* Mark Cutkosky: destrous manipulation and concurrent manufacturing
* Larry Liefer (rehabilitation, user interfaces)

_CS Department:_
* Nils Nilsson
* Mike Genesereth
* Jean-Claude Latombe (path planning and geometric reasoning)
* Leo Guibas (geometric reasoning)
* Tom Binford (vision)
* Yoav Shoham (agents)
* Oussama Khatib

_Aerospace Robotics Laboratory:_
* Bob Cannon
teleoperation, free flyers, space robotics, flexible manipulators

_________________________________________________________________

University of California at Berkeley

_Faculty:_
_Deparment of EE&CS_
* Prof. J. Canny
motion planning
* Prof. R. Fearing
tactile sensing, dextrous manipulation
* Prof. J. Malik
computer vision
* Prof. S. Sastry
multi-fingered hands, control

_Dept. of Optometry/EE&CS_
* Prof. L. Stark
telerobotics

_Dept. of Mechanical Engineering_
* Prof. R. Horowitz
control of robotic manipulators
* Prof. H. Kazerooni
man-robotic systems
* Prof. M. Tomizuka
control of robotic manipulators
* Richard Muller
micro mechanisms

_________________________________________________________________

University of Kansas

Space Technology Center (Telerobotics)
_________________________________________________________________

University of Kentucky

Center for Robotics and Manufacturing Systems (founded 1990)
_________________________________________________________________

University of Massachusetts

_Laboratory for Perceptual Robotics_
Computer Science Department
www: [96]http://piglet.cs.umass.edu:4321/lpr.html

_Faculty:_


Rod Grupen
Robin Popplestone

The lab is equipped with two General Electric P-50 robots, two GE A4s,
a Zebra Zero, and a Denning mobile platform. In addition, the P-50s
are fitted with a 4-fingered Utah/MIT and a 3-fingered Stanford/JPL*
dexterous hand, respectively. The lab includes VxWorks distributed VME
controllers and an experimental real-time kernel (Spring kernel).
Research conducted at the lab includes:

* controller composition for coordinating multiple robots
* grasp planning
* geometric reasoning for robust assembly & fine motion control
* learning for admittance control & path optimization
* biological models of motor planning
* proprioceptive, tactile, & visual model acquisition
* trajectory planning, coarse reaching
* state-space decomposition

The laboratory also engages in collaborative research with the
Computer Vision (A. Hanson, E. Riseman, directors) and Adaptive
Networks (A. Barto, director) groups within the department.

_________________________________________________________________

University of Michigan


Ann Arbor, MI

Departments of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science are
relevant to robotics research. Research includes includes machine
vision, systems and control, multiple cooperating agents (arms and
mobile), and application of SOAR to robots (arms and mobile) in
conjunction with SOAR groups at CMU and elsewhere.

Umich robotics work can be found at [97]Umich Robotics _Contacts_
* Johann Borenstein [98]johann_b...@um.cc.umich.edu
* Yorem Koren [99]yorem...@um.cc.umich.edu

_________________________________________________________________

University of Pennsylvania.

UPenn offers Masters and PhD programs in Robotics and Robotics related
fields of study. These programs are offered through the Departments of
Computer and Information Science, Systems Engineering, and Mechanical
Engineering and Applied Mechanics. The bulk of the robotics research
is conducted in the inter-disciplinary General Robotics and Active
Sensory Perception (GRASP) laboratory. [100]GRASP Web SiteActive areas
of research are Telerobotics, Multiple Arm Control, Robotic Vision,
Learning Control, Multi-agent Robotics and Mechanical Design.

_Faculty_
* R. Bajcsy
* R.P. Paul
* Vijay Kumar
* Max Mintz
* Jim Ostrowski
* Eero Simoncelli

_________________________________________________________________

University of Rochester

_Computer Science Department_
Well known Computer Vision group. See the following web pages:
[101]http://www.cs.rochester.edu/u/jag/PercAct/dvfb.html
[102]http://www.cs.rochester.edu/u/jag
_________________________________________________________________

University of Southern California (USC)

USC has a new MS Program called: Master of Science in Computer Science
with specialization in Robotics & Automation

This Master of Science program prepares graduates for the future of
manufacturing engineering. Emphasized areas include manufacturing as
an international enterprise, and information engineering, with
concentrations in specialties including multimedia, CAD for rapid
prototyping, electronic packaging, magnetic recording, and
manufacturing management. Classroom teaching is transferred into a
practical format and weekly seminars. A nine month internship is a key
part of the practical track for this Program. Students have been
placed in internships with companies such as Sony, Hewlett-Packard,
Qualcomm, Alcoa Electronic Packaging, Kyocera America, Maxtor
Corporation, Spectragraphics, StorageTek, and Valor Electronics.

Financial aid is available. Preferential assistance will be given to
displaced defense industry professionals.

For information on applying to the Program, or accessing an intern for
your company, e-mail [103]P...@ece.ucsd.edu or contact Vivian Shinmoto
at 619-534-7398. MS program seeks to prepare students for a career in
the application of Computer Science to design, manufacturing, and
robotics. It also serves as an introduction to this area for students
who wish to pursue advanced studies and research leading to a Ph.D. A
major goal is to produce a steady stream of graduates who are
qualified to tackle challenging problems in the development of
software for CAD/CAM (Computer-Aided Design and Manufacturing) and
robotics.

There is a strong focus on designing and building within the program
Exposure to the practical aspects (and difficulties) of robotics and
automation is strongly encouraged through laboratory work, and an
optional thesis, conducted in collaboration with industry and research
laboratories.

See also [104]http://cwis.usc.edu/dept/robotics/home.html

For additional information, a complete set of degree requirements, and
application materials, contact our Student Coordinator:


Ms. Amy Yung
Computer Science Department
University of Southern California
Los Angeles, CA 90089-0781
tel: 213.740.4499
net:

_Faculty_
* George Bekey
Assembly planning, design for assembly, neural nets for robot
control, autonomous robots.
* Ken Goldberg
Motion planning, grasping, machine learning.
* Sukhan Lee
Assembly planning, sensor-based manipulation.
* Gerard Medioni
Computer vision.
* Ramakant Nevatia
Computer vision.
* Keith Price
Computer vision.
* Aristides Requicha
Geometric modeling, geometric uncertainty, planning for
manufacture and inspection

About twenty other faculty member associated with the Institute for
Robotics and Intelligent Systems and many others associated with USC's
Information Sciences Institute (ISI).

A Brochure can be obtained from:


Ken Goldberg, Asst Professor
IRIS, Dept of Computer Science
Powell Hall Room 204
University of Southern California
Los Angeles, CA 90089-0273
Internet: gold...@usc.edu

_________________________________________________________________

University of Maryland

_Faculty_
* Dave Akin
Director, Space Systems Laboratory.

Facilties include a large neutral bouyancy tank, and a number of
free-flying teleoperators used underwater in the NBT. Much
teleoperations research. Dave has flown shuttle experiments and his
research is in the areas of teleoperation, control, man-machine
interaction and is one of the very few in the robotics community to
fly hardware in space.

_________________________________________________________________

University of Notre Dame


South Bend, Indiana

The Department of Aerospace and Mechanical Engineering at the
University of Notre Dame offers several courses which are directed
toward an fundamental understanding of the mechanics, kinematics,
estimation and control theory, and computer programming which are
important considerations in the design of robotic systems. Of special
interest is a novel approach for achieving robust and precise
vision-based control of manipulators - "camera-space manipulation".
Doctoral recipients >from this program are teaching and doing research
in tenure-track positions at US universities. For more information,
see, on the World-Wide Web: [105]Skaar Home.html [106]AME
HomePage.html or contact Prof. Steven B. Skaar, Director of Graduate
Studies, [107]steven.b...@ND.EDU Research in Vision-Based
Robotics Using Estimation

The multimedia monograph discusses recent experimental and theoretical
work conducted at the University of Notre Dame aimed at using methods
of estimation to achieve accurate, robust and reliable vision-based
guidance of various kinds of mechanisms, including typical holonomic
robots, fork-lifts and other vehicles. The monograph is divided into
two parts: Part 1 discusses the method of "camera-space manipulation"
and is in the early stages of development. Part 2 discusses
vision-based navigation of a vehicle. Both parts include several
QuickTime movie illustrations of existing experiments, and part 2
includes 3-D animations for illustration of principles.

_________________________________________________________________

The University of Texas at Arlington


F.L. Lewis
Automation and Robotics Research Institute
University of Texas at Arlington
7300 Jack Newell Blvd S
Ft. Worth, TX 76118
tel: 817.794.5972
fax: 817.794.5952

UT Arlington is located in the heart of the Dallas / Ft. Worth
metroplex. The EE department current has 33 faculty and the CSE
department has 20 faculty. Participating students will also be able to
conduct research at the Automation and Robotics Research Institute
located in Ft. Worth.

_________________________________________________________________

University of Wisconsin-Madison

_Mechanical Engineering & Electrical Engineering_
_Faculty_
* Roland Chin
machine vision, pattern recognition
* Neil Duffie
teleoperation, autonomous systems, sensors
* Robert Lorenz
actuators and sensors, robot control algorithms
* Vladimir Lumelsky
motion planning, real-time sensing and navigation

_Computer Science:_
* Charles Dyer
machine vision

_Wisconsin Center for Space Robotics and Automation (WCSAR)_
Interdepartmental NASA center: work is done on various applications of
robotic systems for space.

_________________________________________________________________

University of Utah


Salt Lake City, Utah 84112
Steve Jacobsen
Center for Engineering Design
3176 MEB

Hands, manipulators, biomedical applications, teleoperation. Micro
electro-mechanical systems design.

_________________________________________________________________

Yale University

There is a broad spectrum of research activities in vision and
robotics at Yale. The members of this group include faculty from
Computer Science, Electrical Engineering, Psychology, Neuroscience,
and the Yale Medical School. Active areas of research include machine
vision, humanand computer object recognition, geometric reasoning,
mobile robotics, sensor-based manipulation, control of highly dynamic
nonlinear systems, planning, and learning. There is also a wide
spectrum of interdisciplinary work integrating robotics and machine
vision.

_Faculty_
* James S. Duncan
Geometric/physical models for analysing biomedical images.
* Gregory D. Hager
Sensor-based/task-directed decision-making and planning.
* David J. Kriegman
Model-based object recognition, mobile robot navigation.
* Drew McDermott
Planning and scheduling reactive behavior, knowledge
representation, cognitive mapping.
* Eric Mjolsness
Neural network approaches to vision and visual memory.
* Pat Sharpe
Computational models of hippocampal spatial learning.
* Michael J. Tarr
Behavioral and computational approaches to visual cognition.
* Kenneth Yip Automated reasoning about complex dynamical systems.

_________________________________________________________________

Wilkes University


Wilkes-Barre, PA

[108]Wilkes University is a small, private university located in
Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania. Despite its size, Wilkes is well equipped
with robotics laboratories and has two faculty ( [109]Dr. C.R. Mirman
Ph.D. in Robotics from the University of Illinois at Chicago and
[110]Dr. M.R. Stein, Ph.D. in Robotics from the University of
Pennsylvania) to sponsor graduate robotics research. Robotics is an
integral part of the undergraduate Mechanical Engineering curriculum,
and may be a topic for graduate study in Electrical Engineering.
Wilkes offers a BS in Mechanical Engineering and an MS and Ph.D.
degree in Electrical Engineering. See also their [111]Robotics and
Automation page.
_________________________________________________________________

_________________________________________________________________

[6.2] Student Who's Who

An useful additional source of information is the graduate student
guide compiled by Ron Kube . It is a list of graduate students, their
universities, and areas of research. The list is updated monthly and
can be found at

[112]ftp://ftp.cs.ualberta.ca/pub/kube/whosWho and is also available
on the Web as:
[113]http://www.sm.luth.se/csee/ra/sm-roa/Robotics/WhoSWho.html

The list is a good starting point for those interested in graduate
programs and for those looking for individuals with similar research
interests.
_________________________________________________________________

Last-Modified: Fri Aug 30 02:19:04 1996


[114]Kevin Dowling <ni...@cmu.edu>

References

1. file://localhost/usr/nivek/faq/HTML/copyright.html
2. file://localhost/usr/nivek/faq/HTML/TOC.html
3. file://localhost/usr/nivek/faq/HTML/6.html#6.1
4. file://localhost/usr/nivek/faq/HTML/6.html#6.2
5. file://localhost/usr/nivek/faq/HTML/6.html#Australia
6. file://localhost/usr/nivek/faq/HTML/6.html#University of Western Australia
7. file://localhost/usr/nivek/faq/HTML/6.html#Canada
8. file://localhost/usr/nivek/faq/HTML/6.html#McGill University
9. file://localhost/usr/nivek/faq/HTML/6.html#University of Alberta
10. file://localhost/usr/nivek/faq/HTML/6.html#Finland
11. file://localhost/usr/nivek/faq/HTML/6.html#Helsinki
12. file://localhost/usr/nivek/faq/HTML/6.html#France
13. file://localhost/usr/nivek/faq/HTML/6.html#University of Paris
14. file://localhost/usr/nivek/faq/HTML/6.html#Japan
15. file://localhost/usr/nivek/faq/HTML/6.html#Waseda University
16. file://localhost/usr/nivek/faq/HTML/6.html#Sweden
17. file://localhost/usr/nivek/faq/HTML/6.html#Lulea University of Technology
18. file://localhost/usr/nivek/faq/HTML/6.html#Switzerland
19. file://localhost/usr/nivek/faq/HTML/6.html#Swiss Federal Institute of Technology
20. file://localhost/usr/nivek/faq/HTML/6.html#United Kingdom
21. file://localhost/usr/nivek/faq/HTML/6.html#Bristol University
22. file://localhost/usr/nivek/faq/HTML/6.html#Edinburgh University (UK)
23. file://localhost/usr/nivek/faq/HTML/6.html#Hull University, UK
24. file://localhost/usr/nivek/faq/HTML/6.html#Reading University, UK
25. file://localhost/usr/nivek/faq/HTML/6.html#Salford University
26. file://localhost/usr/nivek/faq/HTML/6.html#University of Birmingham
27. file://localhost/usr/nivek/faq/HTML/6.html#University of Essex (UK)
28. file://localhost/usr/nivek/faq/HTML/6.html#University of Manchester
29. file://localhost/usr/nivek/faq/HTML/6.html#University of Oxford
30. file://localhost/usr/nivek/faq/HTML/6.html#University of Surrey
31. file://localhost/usr/nivek/faq/HTML/6.html#University of the West of England at Bristol, U.K.
32. file://localhost/usr/nivek/faq/HTML/6.html#United
33. file://localhost/usr/nivek/faq/HTML/6.html#Boston University
34. file://localhost/usr/nivek/faq/HTML/6.html#Brandeis
35. file://localhost/usr/nivek/faq/HTML/6.html#California Institute of Technology (Caltech)
36. file://localhost/usr/nivek/faq/HTML/6.html#Carnegie Mellon University (CMU)
37. file://localhost/usr/nivek/faq/HTML/6.html#Colorado School of Mines
38. file://localhost/usr/nivek/faq/HTML/6.html#Clemson University
39. file://localhost/usr/nivek/faq/HTML/6.html#Cornell
40. file://localhost/usr/nivek/faq/HTML/6.html#Georgia Institute of Technology
41. file://localhost/usr/nivek/faq/HTML/6.html#Harvard
42. file://localhost/usr/nivek/faq/HTML/6.html#Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)
43. file://localhost/usr/nivek/faq/HTML/6.html#New York University (NYU)
44. file://localhost/usr/nivek/faq/HTML/6.html#North Carolina State University
45. file://localhost/usr/nivek/faq/HTML/6.html#Northeastern
46. file://localhost/usr/nivek/faq/HTML/6.html#Purdue
47. file://localhost/usr/nivek/faq/HTML/6.html#Rennsalear Polytechnic Institute (RPI)
48. file://localhost/usr/nivek/faq/HTML/6.html#Stanford University
49. file://localhost/usr/nivek/faq/HTML/6.html#University of California at Berkeley
50. file://localhost/usr/nivek/faq/HTML/6.html#University of Iowa
51. file://localhost/usr/nivek/faq/HTML/6.html#University of Kansas
52. file://localhost/usr/nivek/faq/HTML/6.html#University of Kentucky
53. file://localhost/usr/nivek/faq/HTML/6.html#University of Massachusetts
54. file://localhost/usr/nivek/faq/HTML/6.html#University of Michigan
55. file://localhost/usr/nivek/faq/HTML/6.html#University of Pennsylvania.
56. file://localhost/usr/nivek/faq/HTML/6.html#University of Rochester
57. file://localhost/usr/nivek/faq/HTML/6.html#University of Southern California (USC)
58. file://localhost/usr/nivek/faq/HTML/6.html#University of Maryland
59. file://localhost/usr/nivek/faq/HTML/6.html#The University of Texas at Arlington
60. file://localhost/usr/nivek/faq/HTML/6.html#University of Wisconsin-Madison
61. file://localhost/usr/nivek/faq/HTML/6.html#University of Utah
62. file://localhost/usr/nivek/faq/HTML/6.html#Yale University
63. file://localhost/usr/nivek/faq/HTML/6.html#Wilkes University
64. http://telerobot.mech.uwa.edu.au/
65. http://www.cim.mcgill.ca/
66. http://www.hut.fi/English/HUT/Units/Faculties/T/Automation/index.htm
67. http://www.hut.fi/English/HUT/Units/Faculties/T/Automation/res/research.htm
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69. http://www.shirai.info.waseda.ac.jp/humanoid/index.html
70. http://www.sm.luth.se/csee/er/sm-roa/
71. http://www.cs.bham.ac.uk/
72. ftp://ftp.essex.ac.uk/pub/robots/SXlab.ps.Z
73. http://www.cs.man.ac.uk/robotics
74. http://WWW.salford.ac.uk/
75. http://WWW.salford.ac.uk/docs/depts/eee/homepage.html
76. http://robby.caltech.edu/
77. http://www.ri.cmu.edu/
78. http://www.cs.cmu.edu/
79. http://www.ri.cmu.edu/ri-home/phdprog.html
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83. mailto:dda...@eng.clemson.edu
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87. http://www.gatech.edu/aimosaic/robot-lab/MRLHome.html
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89. http://cs.nyu.edu/
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93. http://RVL1.ecn.purdue.edu/

94. http://RVL4.ecn.purdue.edu/~kak/
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105. http://www.nd.edu/NDInfo/Research/sskaar/Home.html
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107. mailto: steven.b...@ND.EDU
108. http://www.wilkes.edu/
109. http://wilkes1.wilkes.edu/~mme/fachp/CM.html
_________________________________________________________________

[7] What is the State of the Robot Industry?

In general, there was a significant slump in the mid to late 1980's in
industrial robotics. However in the early 1990's sales and number have
rebounded to surpass early 1980 numbers and dollars.

From Motion Control Magazine April 1994: Robotics Industries
Association said recently Robot orders jumped 40% through June, 1993
as the industry posted its best opening half-year ever.... Net new
orders received by U.S. based robotics companies totalled 3,640 robots
valued at $306.2 million, the highest unit and dollar figures ever.

From the New York Times, Wednesday September 7th pC1
(paraphrased) In the late 1980's a steep decline in robot orders drove
most US companies out of the business. In the first half of 1994 4,335
robots with a total value of $383.5 million. Fanuc is the leader with
about $360M in sales this year. Asea Brown Boveri (ABB) is second with
sales estimated at $120M. The next several are Japanese: Motoman,
Panasonic, Sony and Nachi.

The only major US producer to have survived is Adept Technology with
about $50M in sales in a $700M market. The following table is
interpreted from a graph in the article.

Net new orders in US:
Year # of robots $US
1984 5800 $480M
1985 6200 $380M
1986 5400 $320M
1987 3800 $300M
1988 4000 $325M
1989 4500 $510M
1990 5000 $510M
1991 4000 $410M
1992 5250 $500M
1993 6800 $630M
1994 4335 (6 mos) $383M (6 mos)

_________________________________________________________________

From Industry Flash Vol1, No. 4, Dec 5, 1994:

_DEMAND FOR U.S. INDUSTRIAL ROBOTS SURGING_
ANN ARBOR, Mich. - U.S.-based robotics companies are enjoying the best
of times. The Robotics Industries Association (RIA) says surging
demand recently led American robotic companies to their best
nine-month totals ever.

Through September, new orders totaled 6,218 robots valued at $548
million, a 12 percent increase in units and 13 percent increase in
revenue over the previous nine-month period last year. The greatest
demand, says the trade group, is coming from U.S. manufacturers which
are finally learning what the Japanese have known for years: robots
can play a significant role in improving productivity, quality,
flexibility and time-to-market. But, even though demand is surging and
the U.S. is the world's second largest robotics user with some 53,000
systems, the Japanese have more than seven times as many robots in
use, RIA says.

_________________________________________________________________

Last-Modified: Sun Aug 11 08:49:43 1996


[3]Kevin Dowling <ni...@cmu.edu>

_________________________________________________________________

[8] What companies sell or build robots?

[3][8.1] Mobile robot companies
[4][8.1.1] AGV Companies
[5][8.1.2] Underwater robots

[6][8.2] Manipulator companies

[7][8.3] Other Organizations doing robotics

[8][8.4] Small Inexpensive Robots

[9][8.5] Entertainment Robots

_________________________________________________________________

[8.1] Mobile robot companies

There are a small number of companies targeting the research community
for the mobile robot market. Helpmate, RWI, and Cybermotion have all
sold and are selling mobile devices for research and real
applications. There are a number of Automatic Guided Vehicle companies
as well and their primary applications are factory operations.
Companies manufacturing Automatic Guided Vehicles (AGV) are listed at
the end of this section. Robot lawn mowers too!

_________________________________________________________________

_Action Machinery Co._ One Vulcan Drive



Helena, AL 35080, USA
tel: 205.663.0814
fax: 205.663.3445

Severe-duty hydraulic robots and manipulators. Payloads from 65kg -
7000kg. Primarily forge, foundry, and casting operations.
_________________________________________________________________

_Applied AI Systems_



Suite 500, Gateway Business Park
340 March Rd, KANATA
Ontario, Canada K2K 2E4
net: 71021...@compuserve.com

Representing IS Robotics and Khepera (see below). MIT subsumption
architecture style robots. Ghengis-II walker runs $8636.00 including a
development system and downloading board, but without LISP.

_________________________________________________________________

_Arrick Robotics _



2107 W. Euless Blvd.
Euless, Texas 76040 USA
tel: 817.571.4528
fax: 817.571.2317
net: rar...@ix.netcom.com
url: [10]www.http://robotics.com/

R20 mobile robot platform for use by AI software developers. 3-wheel
design, 14" wide, 14" long, 10" tall, 15lbs. 20lb payload. On-board
controller connects to the user's laptop computer by cable or low-cost
RF modem (RS232). Sensors include compass, tilt, wheel travel,
temperature, light level, bumpers, battery status, etc. Price as of
1/1/95 $2,900.00. Units in use at UTA Automation Robotics Research
Institute. Send for detailed specifications.

_________________________________________________________________

_Bell and Howell_



Bell & Howell Mailmobile Company
411 E. Roosevelt Ave.
Zeeland MI 49464
tel: 616.772.1000
fax: 616.772.6380
email: For now [11]rpa...@iserv.net

Mailmobiles were developed by Lear-Siegler in the mid-70's for the
industrial cleaning market. They decided to leave this market and Bell
and Howell, the audio-visual equipment company, was refocusing on
office automation products and picked up this product from
Lear-Siegler. There are three models of Mailmobile, the Packmobile,
the Sprint and the Trailmobile. About 3000 systems sold and about 2000
probably in operation. They use a chemical trail that floureseces
under UV light. Payloads up to a couple of hundred kg. Some systems
have been operating for over 15 years.
_________________________________________________________________

_Branch &#38; Associates Pty Ltd_



1153 Tasman Highway
Cambridge, Tasmania 7170
Australia (operating in Europe, Asia and America)
tel: +61-02-485-807
fax: +61-02-485-809 contact: Alex Vail, Division Manager

Since 1979, specialist in autonomous navigation and guidance; products
and technology for applications, research, and teaching. Conquerer
series of fully autonomous AGV's, mapping system, non-accumulated
error, accuracy 1cm, 1 degree, no environmental modifications, $12K -
$25K.

Fander: research and educational mobile robot. $5.5K includes
everything: built-in software demonstrates in real situations numerous
exmaples of roboti mobility technologies for teaching, research and
teaching manual, stand-alone and remote PC modes, real time graphics.
_________________________________________________________________

_Cybermotion_



115 Sheraton Drive
Salem VA 24153
tel: 540.562.7626
fax: 540.562.7632
url: [12]Cybermotion Mobile Robotic Systems

John Holland's company. Mobile K2 bases making use of ingenious
torque-tube synchronous drive system. Security markets and research
platforms, manipulators for base as well. Map building software too.
_________________________________________________________________

_Cyberworks_



31 Ontario Street
Orillia, Ontario
L3V 6H1 Canada
tel: 705.325.6110
fax: 705.325.8566

Primary product are 'building blocks' for mobile robot development
including controllers, sensors, softare and chassis'.
_________________________________________________________________

_Denning Branch International Robotics_



1401 Ridge Avenue
Pittsburgh, PA 15233
tel: (412) 322-4412
fax: (412) 322-2040

email: Soon. Messages to h...@cs.cmu.edu will be forwarded.
Denning-Branch is a merger of Denning Mobile Robotics, once located in
the Boston area, and makers of human-size mobile robots since 1983,
and Branch and Associates, of Hobart, Australia, designers and
builders of smaller mobile robots since 1979.

Among the first products available is an MRV retrofit kit, which
substitutes a modern Intel 80486 system with more power and a simpler
interface for the 1985 vintage MC 68000 based controller.

Fander
Small (~60x30x30 cm) 80486 based robot for educational
purposes, with infrared and rotating sonar sensors,
preprogrammed for several autonomous navigation tasks, and
externally controllable via serial link. $5.5K

MRV 1 &4
Large (~90x90x120 cm) heavy payload capacity synchro drive
robot, with optional sonar ring and laser nav sensors and
software. $13.5K

LaserNav
Robot-mounted scanning infrared laser unit that uses wall
mounted bar-coded retroreflectors or active transponders to
navigate to centimeter precision in 10-meter-scale areas. $8K

RotoSonar
Small-scale revolving sonar head with 4 sonar units and
software. $3K

Sonar Ring
MRV-scale belt of 24 sonar units and driving hardware and
software.

_________________________________________________________________

_General Robotics_



14618 W. 6th Avenue
Suite 150
Golden, CO 80401
tel: 800.422.4265 (US and Canada)
tel: 303.277.1574
fax: 303.277.0310

RB5X mobile robot for educational use. Developed in the early 80's and
has been sold for many years. Similar to design and market for
Heathkit robots. RB5X is $2995. Also sell base unit without wheels and
shell board mounted for experimentation or building your own robot:
$1995. A variety of other options including sensors, cameras, radio
link and software for for Mac, Apple II and PC's are available.
Educational curriculum workbooks and manuals are also available
separately.
_________________________________________________________________

_HelpMate Robotics (formerly TRC)_



Shelter Rock Lane
Danbury, CT 06810
tel: 203.798.8988
fax: 203.791.1082
[13]Helpmate Home Page

Labmate research platform - $7500, plus additional optional sensors
etc. Other products for hospital markets and floor cleaning machines.
(Helpmate and RoboKent respectively)
_________________________________________________________________

_IS Robotics_



Suite 6, 22McGrath Hwy
Somerville, MA 02143
tel: 617.629.0055
fax: 617.629.0126
net:
url: [14]http://isr.com/~isr

* R-3, wheeled robot, $14K
* Genghis II, 15" walking robot, $8.6K
* Pebbles III, tracked robot, $12.5K
* Hermes - high end walking robot

Robots use the 16MHz 68332 (68020 core) microcontrollers (except
Ghengis). Robots include IR and bump sensing for obstacle detection.
Pyro sensors and color camera with pan-tilt are optional. ISR also
performs contract engineering (custom robots). Check the [15]ISR home
page for more details.
_________________________________________________________________

_Kentree_



Kilbritten,
County Cork, Ireland
tel: +353 23 49791, 49808
fax: +353 23 49801

Teleoperated bomb disposal vehicles in a range of sizes.
_________________________________________________________________

_mecos Robotics AG_



Technopark
Pfingstweidstrasse
CH-8005 Zurich
Switzerland
tel: + 41 1 445 11 35
fax: + 41 1 445 11 34
email: me...@mecos.ch
Contact: S. J. Vestli

Company formed as a spin off of the Institute of Robotics, ETH wiss
Federal Institute of Technology). "mecos Robotics" specialises in
modular and adaptive robot manipulators and robot vehicles (mobile
robots). All "mecos Robotics" systems uses the same type of
controller, a VME based computer. This system comes with high level
development tools, and for research institutions the systems have the
advantage of being open. The overall goals of all "mecos Robotics"
systems are flexibility and modularity.

The mobile robot program from "mecos Robotics" follows this principle.
The physical size and the mechanical configuration can be altered. The
standard configuration has three wheels with air tyres and independant
suspension. One wheel is used for steering and propulsion (imagine a
kids tricycle). The overall size is 0.7 m (W) * 1.0 m (L) * 0.5 m (H).
The price depends on configuration and starts around the 70.000,-
Swiss Franks mark.

_________________________________________________________________

_Nomadic Technologies_



1060-B Terra Bella Avenue
Mountain View, CA 94043
tel: 415.988.7200 ext. 203
fax: 415.988.7201
net: no...@robots.com

Nomad 200 is an integrated mobile robot system with four sensing
modules including tactile, infrared, ultrasonic, and 2D laser.
Integrated software development package for the host computer includes
a graphic interface, robot simulator and a library of motion planning,
motion control and sensory data interpretation functions. Geared
toward teaching and research in Robotics and AI. The Nomad utilizes a
synchronous steering system (ala Cybermotion and RWI). Speeds up to .5
meters/second and onboard battery power.

Nomad 200 Mobile Base $10,000

Nomad 200 Control System $ 6,000

Sensus 100 Tactile Sensing System $ 1,500

Sensus 200 Fixed Sonar System $ 2,500

Sensus 500 Structured Light Vision System $ 7,000

RF Modem Kit $ 2,000

Digital Compass $ 450

_________________________________________________________________

_OTO MELARA_



Via Valdilocchi 15
19136 La Spezia ITALY
tel: +39 187 58 2843
fax: +39 187 58 2669
contact: Gian Carlo Caligiani, Robotic Systems Office

OTO MELARA R.2.5.Robotized System
The Robotized R.2.5 (R.2.5.R) Project aims at prototyping a
mobile robot for intervention in hostile environments. The
system is composed by three main units: the transportable
control station, the radio communication set and the mobile
robot based on an armoured, diesel propelled, wheeled platform
called R.2.5. Gorgona, produced by OTO MELARA. Robot can be
remotely controlled via full-duplex radio link. Can be
teleoperated and provides supervised modes as well. Speeds from
30cm/sec to 30km/h. As of May 1994 the locomotion system and
teleoperated system are complete. Additional functionality in
the form of supervised and autonomous operation are planned.

_________________________________________________________________

_Poulan/Weed Eater_



c/o Robotic Solar Mower Dept.
PO Box 91329
Shreveport, LA 71149-1329
tel: 318.687.0100 X3939

[Boiled out of their press release - Gareth Branwyn] The Robotic Solar
Mower is a 5.6kg (12.5lb). automated solar-powered "lawn groomer." It
uses a wire boundary system to keep it inside the mowing area. It runs
continuously when the sun shines. Its operation is "virtually noise
free." It continues on its constant mowing course, taking between
several hours and several days to complete a grooming cycle (depending
on size of yard, obstacles, etc.). Instead of cutting 1/3 of the grass
blades (as in a conventional mower), it only trims the tips. It can
handle a yard up to 1250m^2 (13,500 ft^2) and has a slope tolerance of
15-20 degress. A pilot program is currently offering the mower in the
US for $2,000.
_________________________________________________________________

_Real World Interface (RWI) _



PO Box 375
32 Fitzgerald Drive
Jaffrey, NH 03452
tel: 603.532.6900
fax: 603.532.6901
net: [16]sa...@rwii.com
[17]RWI homepage

RWI manufactures the B14 (an evolved B12) and B21 Mobile Robot
Systems, and in collaboration with ActivMedia, Inc. and Kurt Konolige
of SRI, the newer, low-cost, Pioneer 1 Mobile Robot.
Recently redesigned, the B14's 35.5 x 61cm (14" x 24") (d x h) Synchro
Drive Base now has built-on, tool-less access Smart Panels(tm) with
tactile sensors, a 192-watt hr, hot-swappable battery power system for
continuous service, and carries up to a 9kg (20 lb) payload. New B14
Enclosure mounts on top the Base and hosts Linux computer system,
complete with RWI's RAI robotics servers and client development
software libraries. Full range of IR, sonar, and tactile sensors
included (seamless 360-degrees, top-to-bottom bump protection).

RWI's flagship robot -- the B21 -- is for mobile autonomous research
and commercial applications. The 53x30cm (21" x 12") (d x h) 4-wheel
drive B21 Synchro Drive Base carries a payload of 190kg (200 lbs) and
has 1500-watt hours of independent battery power, hot-swappable for
continuous service. The B21 Enclosure mounts on top the Base and hosts
two internal computers plus a console laptop, all integrated via an
onboard Ethernet, Linux OS, and RWI's RAI robotics software. Smart
Panels(tm) around give easy access to Base and Enclosure equipment and
host a full range of IR, sonar, and tactile sensors. Optional
four-axis arm has gripper and 360-degree wrist, and mounts inside
Enclosure.
Both the B14 and B21 Mobile Robots come with a variety of accessories,
including a newly released stereo vision system and other video
options, radio Ethernet, compass, text-to-speech interface, and more.
Released Summer '95 at IJCAI, the Real World/ActivMedia/Konolige
[18]Pioneer 1 Mobile Robot is targeted for research and training where
affordability (under $2500!) and many platforms are required. Based on
the popular and winning (AAAI '94) Flaky, Pioneer 1 has a
position-accurate 2-wheel drive in a 46 x 35.5 x 23cm (18x14x9") (l x
w x h) chassis, which also carries a 84 watt-hr powerpack and hosts
seven sonars. The custom on-board 68HC11-based controller runs a suite
of robotics servers accessible via onboard serial port by piggyback
laptop or basestation computer client software running SRI's Saphira
software for research in multiple-intelligence and interactive
behaviors. Client libraries and a simulator are included to assist
application development. Fast-Track Vision System, based on [19]Newton
Labs' Cognachrome Vision System now available for Pioneer 1.
Manipulation gripper, vision system, experimenter's modules, and
supporting textbooks by Dr. Kurt Konolige to come.

(B14) B14 Base w/ tactile Smart Panels(tm) $8,500
B14 Enclosure w/ full sensor array $6,000
B14 Pentium (100/16/540MB)* $2,850+/-
B14 Power Station $400

(B21) B21 Base w/ tactile & IR Smart Panels(tm) $19,500
B21 Enclosure w/ full sensor array $11,500
B21 Four-Axis Arm $18,250
B21 Pentium (133/32/1200)* $4,125+/-
B21 Pentium Console (100/16/540/28cm screen) $4,350+/-
B21 Power Station $1,500

(Acc) Pan-Tilt Head $1,950
PCI-based Video Frame Grabber $950
CCD Cameras (color & B &W) $931-$1,375
Radio Links (RS-232 & Ethernet) $595-$5,390
Digital Navigation Compass $850

(New) Basic Robot $2,495
Fast-Track Vision System $2,995**
Gripper $750
ComRad RS-232 Radio $595
Experimenter's Module $200

* All Bxx computers come with Linux and RWI RAI software installed and
with Ethernet networking. ** Introductory price good through May,
1996.

_________________________________________________________________

_Remotec_



114 Union Valley Road
Oak Ridge, TN 37830
tel: 615.483.0228
fax: 615.483.1426

The ANDROS line of teleoperated mobile robots. These were designed to
be useful in the nuclear industry and in other hazardous applications,
and are very rugged. You can hose them down. Available in a range of
sizes, with a variety of optional attachments, such as video cameras,
arms, etc.
_________________________________________________________________

_TAG Technology_



5 Bowlands Mill, Dispensary Street
Alnwick, Northumberland, NE661LN, UK
tel: +44 655 604895
fax: +44 665 510624
net: [20]http://www.tag.co.uk/robots/

A variety of small modular mobile robots, sensors and controllers.
* Frank - a tracked vehicle. Cost $UK 3198
* Igor - a small quadraped walking machine. $UK 2238
* Sensors - ultrasound and IR. $UK 144 - 318 depending on model.
* Neural modeling system - single eurocard board for neural work.

_________________________________________________________________

_Visual Inspection Technologies_



27-2 Ironia Road
Flanders, NJ 07836-9124
tel: 201.927.0033
fax: 201.927.3207

VIT specializes in remote visual and ultrasonic testing but sells or
rents a small tracked rover for inspection work. Products include
ROVVER, SPOT, and PIPECAT vertical pipe crawler. VIT also makes
miniature remote pan and tilt devices.
_________________________________________________________________

_Yamazaki Construction Company_



Intelligent Robot Lab
Kaika Building
2-7-1 Sotokanda
Chiyoda-ku 101 Tokyo
Japan
tel: 81-3-5256-0715

LR1 robot - small research robot, basically a VME cage on wheels with
some ultrasonic sensors and a nice constant force suspension. Has
shown up at IEEE R &A conferences $30K.
_________________________________________________________________

_RoboSoft SA_



6, allee Paul Cezanne
93360 Neuilly Plaisance
FRANCE
tel: +33 1 4944 3035
fax: +33 1 4944 3297

_________________________________________________________________

[8.1.1] AGV Companies

AGV's are Automatic Guided Vehicles. They are common in factory
automation and usually consist of mobile platforms for transporting
goods and materials within factories. Most still use buried wires for
guidance, but several vendors have or will have off-wire capabilities.
AGV subsystems can also be useful in building mobile bases. Wheel
modules can be purchased that already include hub, tire, motor,
bearings, suspension and sometimes steering as well as drive.

The first AGV was installed by the Cravens Company at Mercury Motor
Express in Columbia, SC in 1954. The use of AGV's did not take off
however and even by the early 80's the investment by US firms in AGV's
was less than $70M. However, several European companies took hold of
the idea and rapidly evolved it. The industry in the US peaked in 1985
at about $175M and is slowly recovering. -- From Modern Materials
Handling - 4/96
_________________________________________________________________

_AGV Products_



9307-E Monroe Road
Charlotte, NC 28270-1485
tel: 704.845.1110
fax: 704.845.1111

Controls and components for AGV's. Supplier of Schabmuller
motor-in-wheel drives.
_________________________________________________________________

_BT Systems_



7000 Nineteen Mile Road
Sterling Heights, MI 48314
tel: 313.254.5200
fax: 313.254.5570

Automated Handling Systems (Formerly Volvo Automated Systems)
_________________________________________________________________

_Caterpillar Industrial (now FMC)_



5960 Heisley Road
Mentor, OH 44060
tel: 216.357.2935
fax: 216.357.4410

Manufacturer and distributor of fork lift trucks and guided vehicles.
Cat's SGV's use rotating laser scanner and barcodes as opposed to
traditional wire-guided systems.
_________________________________________________________________

_Control Engineering Company_



Jervis Webb Company
34375 W. Twelve Mile Road
Farmington Hills, MI 48331-5624
tel: 313.553.1220
fax: 313.553.1253

_________________________________________________________________

_Eaton-Kenway_



515 East 100 South
PO Box 45425
Salt Lake City, UT 84145-0425
tel: 801.530.4000
fax: 801.530.4243

AGV's and integrated systems
_________________________________________________________________

_Elwell-Parker_



4205 St. Clair Avenue
Cleveland, OH
tel: 216.881.6200
fax: 216.391.7708

Designs/manufactures rider style, electric, fork and platform mobile
material handling equipment. Line includes AGV's, high tonnage
capacity. Mobile cranes, explosion proof forklifts.
_________________________________________________________________

_Eskay Corporation_



563 West 500 South
Bountiful, UT 84010
tel: 801.295.5315
fax: 801.299.9990

Automated material handling systems including AGVS.
_________________________________________________________________

_Fata Automation_



37050 Industrial Road
Livonia, MI 48150
tel: 313.462.0678
fax: 313.462.0997

Sales and service of AGVs.
_________________________________________________________________

_FMC Corporation_



400 Highpont Drive
Chalfont, PA 18914
tel: 215.822.4300
fax: 215.822.4342

AGVs, Automated Handling Systems, Consulting, Trolley and Power and
Free Converyors, Tow lines, Integrated Systems and Controls, Roll
Handling Equipment.
_________________________________________________________________

_Frog Navigation Systems b.v._



Cartesiusweg 120
3435 BD Utrecht
The Netherlands
tel: (+31) 30 244 05 50
fax: (+31) 30 244 07 00
net: fr...@ich.nl
contact: Leo Lans



USA-office:
1091 Centre Road, Ste 170
Auburn Hills, MI 48326
tel: (+1) 810 377 4000
fax: (+1) 810 377 4004
contact: Charles Rouse - dir of marketing and sales
net: 10202...@compuserve.com

FROG makes AGVs and AGV navigation systems that utilize infrastructure
components to accurately determine AGV position. FROG, and the
SuperFROG AGV supervisory software, are used in both 'traditional' and
'non-traditional' AGV Markets. Traditional applications include
manufacturing and warehousing. Non-traditional applications include
container handling, personnel transport, mining and military use. FROG
will fit any vehicle and can be used in any environment from
clinically clean warehouses to weather beaten dockyards.

Articles on Frog are in 'Automation' February 1991 or in 'Modern
Materials Handling', December 1994 P.46.
_________________________________________________________________

_IDAB Incorporated_



1 Enterprise Parkway, Suite 300
PO Box 8157
Hampton, VA 23666
tel: 804.825.2260
fax: 804.825.9307

Automatic handling systems and AGV's
_________________________________________________________________

_Mannesmann Demag Corporation_



29201 Aurora Road
Cleveland, OH 44139-1895
tel: 216.248.2400
fax: 216.248.3086

Overhead cranes, wire rope and chain hoists, AGV systems, automatic
storage and retrieval systems, monorail, aircraft maintenance
equipment.
_________________________________________________________________

_Mentor AGVS Products_



8500 Station Street
PO Box 898
Mentor, OH 44060
tel: 216.255.4051
fax: 216.255.3430

AGV systems and automated transfer cars.
_________________________________________________________________

_Munck Automation Technology_



161 Enterprise Drive
Newport News, VA 23603
tel: 804.887.8080
fax: 804.887.0558
url: [21]http://www.munck.com

Manufacturer and integrator of automated material handling systems.
AGVS of many configurations (unitload, forklift, towing)
_________________________________________________________________

_The Raymond Corporation_



South Canal Street
PO Box 130
Greene, NY 13778
tel: 607.656.2311
fax: 607.656.9005

Material handling equipment.
_________________________________________________________________

_Roberts Sinto Corporation_



3001 West Main Street
PO Box 40760
Lansing, MI 48901-7960
tel: 517.371.2460
fax: 517.372.4930

MGV's (Mechanically guided vehicles)
_________________________________________________________________

_Professional Materials Handling Co, Inc._



4203 Landmark Drive
Orlando, FL 32817
tel: 305.677.0040

Steinbock fork trucks. Wire guided, use regenerative braking.
_________________________________________________________________

_Saurer Automation Systems_



Saurer Automation Systems
11818 James Street
Holland, MI 49424-9658
tel: 616.393.0101
fax: 616.393.0331
Holland, MI

Saurer was formerly Litton Industrial Automation and is a full service
material handling company.
_________________________________________________________________

_________________________________________________________________

[8.1.2] Underwater robots

[new section, need more information]

There are a number of companies building underwater remotely operated
vehicles (ROV's).

_[22]R.O.V. Technologies, Inc_



Franklin Road, Vernon, Vermont 05354
tel: 802.254.9353
net: [23]rov...@sover.net

Nuclear Underwater Equipment, Sales and Service
* Hydrovision Tel UK ? 224-740145
* Benthos Tel US 1-800-446-1222
* JW Fishers Tel US 1-800-822-4744
* Sutec Tel Sweeden ? 46-13-15-80-60
* Rovtech Tel Uk ? 229-813641
* Deep Ocean Engineering Tel US 501-562-9300
* UWI Tel UK ? 224-896913

_________________________________________________________________

[8.2] Manipulator companies

This is only a partial list of manipulator manufacturers. A wide
variety of arms and arm components are made by these vendors and other
vendors.

_________________________________________________________________

_Adept Technology_



150 Rose Orchard Way
San Jose, CA 95134
tel: 408.432.0888
fax: 408.432.8707
url: [24]http://www.adept.com/

High speed direct-drive and harmonic-drive SCARA style arms. 0.001"
(.025mm) repeatabiliy. Payloads from 4-25kg Can be used in clean room
and food applications as well. Adept also sells vision systems and
controllers.
_________________________________________________________________

_AEA Technology_


AEA is the commercial division of the UK Atomic Energy Authority.
markets the NEATER series telerobots for decommssioning in the nuclear
industry. The system includes a bilateral input device and active
(autonomous) force control.

The system can deploy drills, reciprocating saws, nibblers, grippers
for insertions etc. Larger range of robots including the AEA
Technology 200 Kg arm, use filtering compliance to avoid damage to the
robot when deploying heavy duty dismantling tools.
_________________________________________________________________

_Antenen Research_



PO Box 95
Hamilton, OH 45012
tel: 800.323.9555
tel: 513.887.4700
fax: 513.887.4703

New and used robots for manufacturing, research and training. Used at
savings of 40% - 70%. Also lots of parts and accessories.
_________________________________________________________________

_Asea Brown Boveri (ABB), Vesteraas, Sweden_



ABB Robotics
2487 South Commerce Drive
New Berlin, WI 53151
tel: 414.785.3400
fax: 414.789.9235

Now own Cinncinatti Milacron robotics group, Graco and Trallfa. ABB
Robotics is part of a ABB, large swiss-based company, with Many types
of larger industrial robots. Many are optimized for painting, welding
and sealant applications.
_________________________________________________________________

_Comau - Italy_



Via Rivalta 30
10095 Grugliasco
Torino, Italy
tel: 011 33341
fax: 011 7809156

A variety of industrial manipulators ranging in payloads from 6kg to
125kg. All electric AC drives. One of the novel designs is a 6DOF,
12kg payload robot The SMART-3 6.12 R. It uses a carbon fibre forearm,
absolute resolver feedback and 0.15mm repeatability.
_________________________________________________________________

_CRS Plus,_



5344 John Lucas Drive
Burlington, Ontario
Canada L7L 6A6
tel: 905.332.2000
fax: 905.?

Sells several manipulators. 5-DOF around $25K, 6DOF around $33K. Sell
end-effectors as well (electric, vacuum and penumatic) Wrist can be
bought separately. Controllers use RAPL, a VAL-like language. Fairly
open architecture. 3Kg payloads +/- 0.05mm repeatability.
_________________________________________________________________

_Eshed Robotics_



Eshed Robotec
Israel (HQ)
tel: 03-498136
fax: 03-498889

In the US



Eshed Robotec Inc.
445 Wall St.
Princeton, NJ 08540-1504
tel: 609.683.4884
tel: 800.777.6288

Eshed Robotec BV
Oude Torenweg 29
5388 RK Nistelrode
The Netherlands
tel: +31.412.611476
fax: +31.412.613185
net: [25]esh...@pi.net

url: [26]http://www.pi.net/~eshedbv/ and [27]http://www.eshed.com
Eshed makes a variety of robot manipulators for education, training
and instructional use. This includes a half-dozen manipulator
products, vision systems and a variety of machining and
manufacturing systems. Eshed has sold over 8000 robots for training
and education.
Eshed has many dealers throughout Europe. Many dealers can be found
at: [28]dealer list
_______________________________________________________________

_International Submarine Engineering Ltd, ISE_
1734 Broadway Street
Port Coquitlam, B.C.
Canada V3C 2M8
tel: 604.942.5223
fax: 604.942.7577
url: [29]http://www.ise.bc.ca/ E-mail: [30]in...@ise.bc.ca
Underwater manipulators and teleoperated underwater vehicles.
_______________________________________________________________

_Kawasaki Robotics (USA Inc.)_
28059 Center Oaks Court
Wixom MI 48393
tel: 810.305.7610
fax: 810.305.7618
[31]KR Home page Kawasaki was the first Japanese mfg to lead in the
production of industrial robots. They licensed the former Unimation
line of robots and now make about a dozen types of electric arms for
welding, painting and assembly.
_______________________________________________________________

_Kinetic Sciences_
3250 East Mall
Vancouver, BC, CANADA V6T 1W5
tel: 604.822.2144
fax: 604.822.6188
net: [32]in...@kinetic.bc.ca
url:
[33]http://www.asi.bc.ca/asi/affiliates/kinetic/KSI_home_pg.html
Kinetic Sciences Inc. (KSI) provides technology innovation, research
services and product development in the field of advanced robotics
for operation in hazardous or menial environments. Our areas of
expertise include: innovative robotic mechanisms (such as our
Tentacle robot arm), computer vision (6 DOF position measurement and
automatic inspection), advanced sensors, and autonomous control. For
further information check out our web pages at: [34]KSI
_______________________________________________________________

_Komatsu_
Construction Robotics Department
contact: Shigeo Ohno
fax: 81.44-288-6177 (japan)
email: shi...@aix.or.jp
url: [35]http://www.japan.hosting.ibm.com:80/komatsu/index-e.htm
(English)
The LM15-1 mini crane is a compact and portable electrically powered
manipulation system. The device can be transported in a van and can
be easily moved up and down stairs by rubber crawler tracks or
winched vertically. The LM15-1 can work in relatively small spaces
of 4x10m in area. It is powered by 100VAC, and has wireless remote
control. Load specifications are 150kg at 3m. The telescoping boom
can reach to 4m. It can be stored in a compact size of about 1m^2
and can be split into two even smaller pieces to ease storage and
transport further.
See the URL listed above for more details and pictures. Price:
Y3,200,000 (between US$25-32K depending on the exchange rate)
_______________________________________________________________

_Kraft Telerobotics_
11667 W. 90th Street
Overland Park, KS 66214
tel: 913.894.9022
fax: 913.894.1363 Nice telerobotic arms for underwater work.
_______________________________________________________________

_Labman Automation Ltd_
Stokesley, North Yorkshire. TS9 5JY. UK
net: tel:INT 44 642 710580
url: [36]www.quay.co.uk/labman/
[soon to be www.zebra.co.uk/labman/] Contact: Andrew Whitwell
Tailoring mainly gantry based systems for laboratory applications.
Designs include storage systems, multiple manipulators, special
probes, modification of instruments and laboratory equipment. PC
driven stepper drives, linear drives, dc motors, pneumatics, all
sensors, RS232 links, LIMS communication. Systems include powder
feeding, wet chemistry analysis, microtitre plate handling and many
more.
_______________________________________________________________

_mecos Robotics AG_
Technopark Zurich
Pfingstweidstrasse 30
CH-8005 Zurich
Switzerland
tel: + 41 1 445 11 35
fax: + 41 1 445 11 34
net: me...@mecos.ch
Contact: E. Nielsen Spin-off of the Institute of Robotics, ETH
(Swiss Federal Institute of Technology). Modular and adaptive robot
manipulators and robot vehicles (mobile robots). All mecos Robotics
systems use a VME based computer as controller. The system comes
with high level development tools, and are open systems. The
manipulator's mechanical configuration can be changed at will
(number and type of joints, length of links, etc.) Manipulators use
linear aluminum extrusions with integral motions for joints. The
controller accounts for configuration changes. With this principle
of modularity and flexibilty hybrid force / position controllers
have been realised on "mecos Robotics" arms. Price depending on
configuration (50.000,- Swiss Franks and upwards). NTSC or PAL
videos available for Sfr. 40 per tape.
_______________________________________________________________

_Mitsubishi_ Mitsubishi PA-10 portable robot.

7 DOF, with continuous path control

Supposedly *open* control architecture, using PC

30 Kg arm, 25 Kg controller, 10 Kg payload


[I have no other information on this, anyone?]
_______________________________________________________________

_Motoman [Hobart/Yaskawa]_
Corporate Office:
805 Liberty Lane,
West Carrollton, OH, 45449.
tel: 513.847.3300

Sales Office
Dublin, OH
tel: 614.718.6200 Large industrial manipulators for welding,
painting, palletizing, dispensing, etc. Can be floor, ceiling or
wall mount units. Payloads for the 8 robots in the K-series range
from 3kg to 100kg and repeatability of 0.1 to 0.5 mm over that same
range. They are vertical jointed-arm type manipulators. (i.e. 4 bar
linkage to reduce arm intertias). 3 S-series robots are SCARA-type
manipulators with payloads of 50-60kg and varying workspace sizes
Yaskawa also has bought the rights to RobotWorld, Vic Schienman's
unique gantry design robot system. This system allow a number of
mobile modules in the same workspace to zip around at speeds up
80"/sec (3G accel). RAIL and C can be used in a multilevel
programming environment. 0.002" Accuracy, 0.0005" repeatability.
Neat stuff.
_______________________________________________________________

_Oxford Intelligent Machines (OxIM)_
12 Kings Meadow,
Osney Mead Industrial Estate
Oxford, OX2 0DP, UK
tel: +44 (0) 865 204881
fax: +44 (0) 865 204882
contact: Dr. Peter Davey Incorporated in 1990, OxIM provides a
complete design service in the related fields of industrial sensors
and automation. OxIM is manufacturing and developing robots and
advanced industrial equipment. The MAP-IT vehicle is an open
architecture research vehicle for indoor environments. The top
surface, complete with an array of mounting holes, is available to
the user for moutning experimental sensors and payload. Two direct
drive motor-gearbox units provide locomotion. An extended 3U rack
contains a controller card and power converter drive card. A third
spare slot is provided. 400mm diam with payload surface 200mm above
ground. Remote base station including power supply, dual RS232
ports, Full ANSI source code, 2 spare axes of servo control, bumper
system, 10kg payload, 65W power supply. Several options are also
available including PC interface.
_______________________________________________________________

_Salisbury Robotics, Inc._
20 Pemberton St.
Cambridge, MA 02140
tel: 617.661.8847
net: j...@ai.mit.edu Sells the three-fingered Salisbury hand and
force sensing fingertips. Contact: Ken Salisbury,
_______________________________________________________________

_Sands Technology International_
US
Sands Technology International Inc.
825 Highway 33, Trenton NJ 08619
tel: 1.609.584.7522
fax: 1.609.584.0239
email: [37]robo...@aol.com
contact: David Sands or Annis Monforte
UK/Europe
Sands Technology Ltd.
Orwell House, Cowley Road, Cambridge, UK
tel: 44 1223 420288
fax: 44 1223 420291
email: [38]robo...@dial.pipex.com
contact: David Sands or Cathy George
Sands has been making robots since 1989. Sands make 3 robots, a low
cost 5 axis bench top articulated arm, a bench top cylindrical
format arm and a modular Cartesian arm which can be quite small or
quite large depending on customer needs.
All the robots are low cost, driven by stepping motors with
sophisticated controls. Fairly fast, fairly accurate, very reliable.
The controller is open, and uses an extension of FORTH we called
ROBOFORTH which has over 400 commands (not counting building blocks)
See [39]Sands Home Page for more details including drawings
dimensions, speeds, payloads etc.
_______________________________________________________________

_Sarcos Research Corporation_
390 Wakara Way,
Salt Lake City, Utah 84108
tel: 801.581.0155 Spinoff of University of Utah's Center for
Engineering Design (CED). Teleoperated systems, manipulators.
Audio-animatronic work as well. Beautiful force reflecting work and
systems. High performance and small hydraulic valves and actuators.
IP address: sarcos.com
_______________________________________________________________

_Schilling_
1632 Da Vinci Court
Davis, CA 95616
tel: 916.753.6718
fax: 916.753.8092 Electro-mechanical engineering and manufacturing
company specializing in telerobotics. Various remote manipulator and
telerobotic manipulator systems.
_______________________________________________________________

_Seiko Instruments_
Torrance, CA
tel: 310.517.7850
fax: 310.517-8158
url: [40]Seiko Instruments
Seiko Instruments offers a complete line of industrial robots
including SCARA, Cylindrical and Cartesian robots which are some of
the fastest in the world. They also offer a point and click
Microsoft Windows based Vision System which works with all our
robots or as a stand alone system.
_______________________________________________________________

_Sony Corporation of America_
Factory Automation Division
542 Route 303
Orangeburg, NY 10962
tel: 914.365.6000
fax: 914.365.6087 Several SCARA type manipulators including a double
armed manipulator. This model is used for the assembly of 8mm
camcorders!
_______________________________________________________________

_Robotics Research Corp._
P.O. Box 206
Amelia, OH 45102
tel: 513.831.9570
fax: 513.381.5802 RRC offers a variety of dexterous manipulators
which can be operated individually or in dual-arm mode. Their second
generation, denoted the "i-Series", is lighter and provides great
dexterity. They are currently building "spaceflight-qualified"
manipulators for NASA (GSFC) using this new generation of their
product. They have also been doing some work developing sensor-based
automatic obstacle detection and avoidance technology which uses a
patented algorithm with arm-mounted sensors. They have also built
two massively-redundant 17-DOF Anthropomorphic systems for Grumman
and JPL to serve as testbeds for researching "man-equivalent" robots
for space applications.
_______________________________________________________________

_Robotic Systems International (RSI), Ltd._
9865 W. Saanick Rd.
Sydney, BC V8L 3S1
Canada
tel: 604.656.0101
_______________________________________________________________

_UMI Microbot _[no longer in business in the US]
In the UK:

Oxford Intelligent Machines, UK
tel: 0865 204881 Originally known as the Microbot teachmover. A
small cable driven manipulator for desktop robotics. Excellent
teaching tool. Original design by John Hill (now at SRI) Microbot
was bought out by the British company UMI two years ago. In May,
1991 they moved from Silicon Valley to Detroit, MI. As of Early
1994, only the UK company was still in business.
_______________________________________________________________

_USA Robot_
PO Box 4018
Portland, ME 04101
tel: 207.761.9039 Maxym production robots for business. Simple
accurate 3D linear motions coupled with power tooling such as
routers, air drills and sanders. Workspaces up to 60cmx147cmx15cm.
IBMPC software for designing parts and production path but takes DXF
files as input. Not a machine like the giant production turning and
routing machines used by large furniture makers but is a nice small
machine for small production shops. Prices range from $14.5K to
$19.9K.
_______________________________________________________________

_Western Space and Marine_
111 Santa Barbara St.
Santa Barbara, CA 93101
tel: 805.963.3831
fax: 805.963.3832 Telerobotic manipulators for space and undersea
applications.
_______________________________________________________________

_Yamaha Robotics_
PO Box 956
Broomall, PA 19008-0956
tel: 800 92-YAMAHA
fax: 610.543.8113 Yamaha makes HXYA series of light cartesian
robots. AC brushless motors can move payloads up to 50kg at 1.4m/s.
Aluminum extruded frames that are lightweight, rigid and easy to
mount. Work envelope sizes from 250mm x250mm to 2050mm x 1050mm.
_______________________________________________________________

_Zymark Corp_
Zymark Center
Hopkinton, MA 01748-1668
tel: 508-435-9500 Robots for laboratory automation. Zymate Robots.
_______________________________________________________________

Other companies: (no addresses, yet)

Furukawa

Sumitomo

Chubu

Beckman Biomark

HP ORCA

Tecan


_______________________________________________________________

[8.3] What other Organizations are working with robotics?


This list is a small fraction of companies and other organizations
that are actively working in robotics. One way to obtain more
companies is to search through proceedings of conferences or find
member companies of many of the organizations listed in previous FAQ
sections. Industrial robotics is used widely throughout a number of
companies. Most large aerospace companies have groups working in or
looking into robotics. Lockheed Martin (Denver), Rockwell
International (Downey, CA), Boeing (Seattle) to name a few.


Educational Organizations (Not Universities)


_______________________________________________________________

_KISS Insitute for Practical Robotics (KIPR)_
10719 Midsummer Drive
Reston, VA 22091
contact: Dave Miller
tel: 703.620.0551
fax: 703.860.1802
net: [41]ki...@src.umd.edu
url: [42]http://www.ai.mit.edu/people/dmiller/kipr/kipr.html



KISS Institute for Practical Robotics is a private non-profit
educational corporation. As an organization dedicated to promoting
education and utilization of practical integrated robotics, KISS
Institute provides an umbrella for conducting joint research
projects, dispersing information, and teaching courses involving
members from many different home institutions.


_Computers, Robotics and Artists Society of Houston [CRASH]_ See
[43]CRASH

Research Centers


_______________________________________________________________

_Advanced Robotics Research Centre_

Salford, UK. The Advanced Robotics Research Ltd (incorporating the
National Advanced Robotics Research Centre, UK) is a joint UK
Government and UK Industries funded research organisation involved
in the research of enabling technologies for the advanced robotics
systems.
_______________________________________________________________

_Automation and Robotics Research Institute (ARRI)_

7300 Jack Newell Blvd. South
Ft. Worth, Texas 76118
tel: 817.794.5900
_______________________________________________________________

_Mechanical Engineering Lab (MEL)_

Tsukuba City, Japan Kazuo Tanie: Robotics and cybernetics
_______________________________________________________________

_Electrotechnical Laboratory (ETL), AIST, MITI._

1-1-4 Umezono, Tsukuba, Ibaraki, 305 Japan.

General description:
ETL is a govermental institute with about 630 staffs and annual
budget of over 10 billion yen including personnel expenses,
covering a broad area related to electronics, physics, material
sciences, device technology, energy technology, standards and
measurements technology, bio-electronics, information science,
computer science, computer systems, artificial intelligence,
and robotics. Gopher host: [44]gopher://etlport.etl.go.jp

Robotics group:
Intelligent Systems Division covers robotics and related areas.
It consists of following sections; Intelligent Machine
Behavior, Autonomous Systems, Computer Vision, Interactive
Interface Systems, and Communicating Intelligence.

The robotics group in the division foucuses on intelligent
robots and system integration. Its current research topics
include, but not limited to, Dextrous manipulation, Motion
planning, Active vision, Multi-sensor fusion, Multi-fingered
hands, Hand-eye systems, Mobile robot navigation,
Multiple-robot cooperation, Intelligent teleoperation,
Learning, and Architecture.

The robotics group at ETL has continuously been at the frontier
of intelligent robotics research.

PostDoc positions:
ETL accepts postdoctoral research fellows from all over the
world. Mainly two support programs are available: STA
fellowship and AIST fellowship. They require a doctoral degree,
age no greater than 35, fluency in Japanese or English, etc.
Typical research period is one year (2 yrs max.). The
fellowship includes a basic allowance (270,000yen/month) plus
family allowance (50,000yen/month), housing cost, and a round
trip air ticket (1 person). The fellowships are highly
competetive and have different application procedures depending
on an applicant's nationality. Those who are interested should
contact their local governmental agency for international
research cooperation (such as NSF in USA). A more convenient
way might be to catch a member of ETL staff at some conference
and inquire about the fellowships.

Graduate Summer Institute Program:
ETL is a member of the graduate summer institute program. The
robotics group hosts a couple of guest student researchers
every summer. The Graduate Summer Institute program is based on
Japan-USA contract on research cooperation in science and
technology. It is open for graduate students in the USA who are
majoring in science and technology fields.

The aim of the program is to provide opportunities for the
students to get acquainted with Japanese culture, science and
techonology, and to promote future collaboration in research in
science and techonology. Here is some data from last year's
example.

Period: 2 months (Late June -- Late August).

Program (subj. to change): Japanese classes. Research at host
institutes. Lectures, Meetings, Going to Kabuki, Kyoto
tour, Official Receptions.

Support: Return air ticket, domestic transportation,
accomodation, japanese classes, tours.

Contact: Japan Programs, Division of International Programs, NSF.


_______________________________________________________________

_Arbeitsgemeinschaft der Groforschungseinrichtungen (AGF)_
(Association of National Research Centers)
Wissenschaftszentrum
Ahrstrae 45
Postfach 20 14 48
53144 Bonn
tel: (02 28) 3 76 74-1
fax: (02 28) 3 76 74-4 [45]http://www.gmd.de/AGF-Anschriften.html
These are sixteen research centers in Germany. One of the research
centers is GMD and they do robotics. GMD is at
[46]http://borneo.gmd.de/AS/janus/pages/janus.htm
_______________________________________________________________

National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA)


_NASA Headquarters_
NASA Headquarters, Washington DC. Contact: Dave Lavery email:
dave....@hq.nasa.gov, URL: [47]Dave Lavery Home Page


The ongoing NASA robotics research program develops autonomous,
semi-autonomous and teleoperated systems and technologies for
applications in Earth orbit and on planetary surfaces. Technology
efforts are focussed on local autonomy, dexterous manipulation,
task-level command and control, and contending with extremely harsh
environments.


[48]NASA HQ Telerobotics Home Page
_______________________________________________________________

_NASA Ames Research Center_
Moffet Field, CA.


I, TROV and Ranger projects. [49]http://maas-neotek.arc.nasa.gov/
_______________________________________________________________

_NASA Goddard Space Flight Center (GSFC)_
Greenbelt, MD 20771
Contact: Stephen Leake Since the cancellation of the Flight
Telerobotic Servicer (FTS), the Robotics Lab has been concentrating
on work in the area of automated space craft servicing. The goal is
to replace or supplement Extra Vehicular Activity (EVA) with
teleoperated or semiautonomous robotic systems for external vehicle
maintenance. Current project includes a robot to assist in second
Hubble servicing mission.
_______________________________________________________________

_NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory_

4800 Oak Grove Drive
Pasadena, CA
Contact: Chuck Weisbin, The JPL robotics efforts concentrate on
development, integration and demonstration of A&R technologies, with
a focus on plantary surface systems and autonomous mobile rovers.


[50]NASA JPL Robotics Home Page
_______________________________________________________________

_NASA Johnson Space Center (JSC)_

Houston, TX
Contact: Charles Price More of an operations house but lots of
shuttle RMS work. A number of robot projects including testing of
space station manipulator systems happens at JSC.
[51]http://tommy.jsc.nasa.gov
_______________________________________________________________

_NASA Kennedy Space Center (KSC)_

Robotics Group
Contact: Bill Jones [52]http://www.ksc.nasa.gov/ksc.html
Like JSC, KSC is an operations house with responsibility to keep
shuttles flying and integrate payloads. There is a small but growing
robotics group that is emplacing ground support robotics
applications. Recent work includes filter inspector for launch pad
payload areas, shuttle radiator inspector and a mobile system for
thermal protection system tasks.
_______________________________________________________________

_NASA Langley Research Center, (LaRC)_

Hampton, VA Contact: Jack Pennington - vision, inspection, 3-D
sensors [53]http://www.arc.nasa.gov/
_______________________________________________________________

National Laboratories


The US National Laboratories are large complexes with a number of
robotics efforts. One current focus is the enormous and costly
cleanup of the weapons complexes throughout the country.
Remediation, removal and cleanup of hazardous materials will require
hundreds of billions of $$$ and many years. Robotics will be a key
in much of this.


_Sandia National Laboratories_
Albuquerque, NM Sandia is a DOE National Laboratory with a
substantial program in robotics at its Intelligent Systems and
Robotics Center. The Center has interests in manufacturing,
hazardous material handling, site remediation, and research to
support these applications. Consequently areas of focus include
assembly planning, robotic interfaces, control theory, motion
planning, sensor fusion, sensor development, mobile vehicles,
telemanagement, mobile vehicles, and so on.


At the time of writing (2/15/93) the center has nearly 100 full-time
staff with degrees in computer science, mechanical engineering,
mathematics, electrical engineering, as well as a few in other
fields. The mix is about 30% PhD, 40%MS, and 30% BS. Recent hires
have come from Cornell, Stanford, Berkeley, CMU, Illinois, Penn, ...


The center operates over 20 fully equipted labs including robots
from Puma, Adept, GCA, Cincinnati Millacron, and Schilling. The
virtual reality lab includes stereoscopic viewers from Fake Space,
audio, speech recognition and synthesis, and big boxes from SGI to
drive the graphics. In addition to the normal complement of
departmental computing we have use of other compute resources at
Sandia including a 1000 node N-cube, a 1000+node Intel Paragon,
several crays, a CM-200 (16K procs).


Contacts: Randy Brost, Pat Xavier, Sharon Stansfield, Pang Chen,
David Strip, Jim Novak, Ray Harrigan, Pat Eicker, Bob Anderson.


_Oak Ridge National Laboratory_

Center for Engineering Systems Advanced Research
P. O Box 2008, MS-6364
Oak Ridge, TN 37831-6364
tel: 615.241.4959
fax: 615.574.7860 Contact: Dr. Lynne E. Parker, email:
Park...@ornl.gov


Research in mobile and manipulator robotics, including redundant and
multiple manipulators, cooperating mobile robots, parallel vision
systems, sensor fusion, laser range finder research, real-time
quantitative reasoning and behavior based control, and machine
learning. Current applications include robots for nuclear power
stations, environmental restoration and waste management, material
handling, and automated manufacturing.


Researchers: James Baker, Marty Beckerman, Chuck Glover, William
Grimmell, Judd Jones, Reinhold Mann, Ed Oblow, Lynne Parker,
Nageswara Rao, David Reister, Phil Spelt, Michael Unseren.
_______________________________________________________________

US Department of Defense


_Air Force's Robotics and Automation Center of Excellence (RACE)_



Robotics and Automation Center of Excellence
SA-ALC/TIEST
450 Quentin Roosevelt Rd
Bldg 183
Kelly AFB
San Antonio, TX 78241-6416
url: [54]http://www.kelly-afb.org/links/orgs/race/race.htm
net: [55]ti-...@sadis01.kelly.af.mil
contact: Steve Knauber [56]skna...@sadis05.kelly.af.mil

The mission of the Robotics and Automation Center of Excellence (RACE)
is to insert appropriate robotics and automation technologies into Air
Force industrial processes. RACE accomplishes this mission by keeping
abreast of current technology and recommending any technologies that
may resolve present or future Air Force requirements. RACE is the link
between industry, universities, the Department of Energy, NASA,
technical societies, contractors and the Air Force.

RACE is also responsible for providing organic technical expertise to
the Air Force during integration of new robotics and automation system
developments. RACE acts as a consultant throughout the entire
acquisition process, providing technical evaluations from initial
problem specification to implementation of proposed solution. RACE
employee expertise, in-house test and evaluation facilities, and
process studies are all used to support hardware transfer to the user.

_[57]NRaD_ NRAD is the Research, Development, Test, and Evaluation
Division of the Naval Command Control and Ocean Surveillance Center
(NCCOSC), located in San Diego, California. NRaD and its predecessor
organizations (Naval Ocean Systems Center (NOSC), Naval Undersea
Center (NUC), etc.) have been involved in various aspects of robotics
since the early 1960's.

Robotics research and development at NRaD are currently performed by
two groups:

[58]The Advanced Systems Division (Code 37): land and air robots
[59]The Ocean Engineering Division (Code 74): underwater robots
_________________________________________________________________

Companies

_Redzone Robotics_



2425 Liberty Avenue
Pittsburgh, PA 15222-4639
tel: 412.765.3064
fax: 412.364.3069

contact: Dave White

A spin-off of CMU, Redzone has focused on hazwaste and nuke
manipulator applications but is also developing mobile applications.
Primarily protoypes and not multiple unit manufacturing at this time.
_________________________________________________________________

_Southwest Research Institute_



San Antonio, TX

Robotics and Automation Department
Some large systems for servicing aircraft (painting, spraying,
deriveting etc)
_________________________________________________________________

[8.4] Small Inexpensive Robots

One of the most common discussions on the net are related to finding,
building and working on small and low cost robots. There are several
small robots on the market and a number of construction kits that
robots can be built from such as Lego, FischerTechnik, Erector and
Capsula. None of these require large investments. These systems are at
most several hundred $US and can run on a desktop. There are also a
number of kit robots that include printed-circuit boards and
components.
_________________________________________________________________

_Advanced Design, Inc._



6080 N. Oracle Road, Suite B
Tucson, Arizona 85704
USA
tel: 520.544.2390
fax: 520.575.0703
net: de...@robix.com

url: [60]Robix WWW Site

ADI makes the Robix(tm) RCS-6 Robotic Construction Set, priced at
US$550, or US$565 for 220V/50Hz and PAL video. The RCS-6 is designed
specifically for use by educators and industrial modelers, and is used
to build and operate a wide variety of PC connected desktop robots.
Included are many construction parts, 6 hobby-type servos, an
electronics interface with an 8-channel 8 bit A/D, power supply,
software, manual, video, carrying case, and more, even including a
pair of safety goggles.

The 40-minute video that comes with the set is also available
separately for just the airmail postage cost: US$3 to US locations, $4
to Canada, $5 to Mexico and $8 to all other countries. Shown in the
video are 5 different arms built for (and performing) 5 different
tasks, a pair of 3-servo-each opposable fingers twiddling a ball, 3
animatronic figures, and a 3-legged (but 6-footed) walker with both a
walking and galloping stride. In addition, an arm is built
step-by-step in the video, and then programmed interactively. The
software includes a scripting interface as well as complete C and
QuickBasic 4.5 libraries with documentation and sample code.

For complete technical information, a faq section, text of a cover
story about the RCS-6 in Popular Electronics Magazine, plus over 50
image files (.gif's), a DOS PC .gif viewer, a useful section on what
the set does *not* do, and more, download from the anonymous ftp site:
[61]ftp://ftp.robix.com/pub/robix. See the readme.txt file there
first.

To get the video, order by phone or fax, or by email from
de...@robix.com. Visa and Mastercard are accepted.

_________________________________________________________________

_Aleph Technology_



Parc Heliopolis
16 rue du Tour de l'eau
BP 295-38407
Saint Martin d'Heres cedex, France
tel: +33 76422999
fax: +33 76444620

Small, turtle robot for education. 17000FF
_________________________________________________________________

_Angelus Research_



6344 Sugar Pine Circle #98
Angelus Oaks, CA
tel: 909.794.8325.
contact: Don Golding
net: [62]http://www.AngelusResearch.com

Angelus' line of robot products includes:


Whiskers the Robot-A 13 pound rugged robot which is very
intelligent and is very simple to program ($895).
Advanced Whiskers-Two networked processors allow real-time
collision avoidance and navagation ($1895).
ARC-100 controller-Build your own intelligent robot($895) like
Whiskers. Networkable. ARC-110 controller-Like above but has
our narrow beam sonar onboard. Networkable.
HiPower Board-Drive two 10 amp DC motors($195).
MR-1-Series robot for the serious researcher or roboticist.
Available March 1996. ($1995-$10,000).
Heathkit Hero intelligent upgrade kit ($795) includes:


1 ARC-110 controller
1 HiPower Board
4 6 inch Light sensor arrays

_________________________________________________________________

_Capsula_



Play-Jour International
Room 914, New World Office Building
(East Wing), 24 Salisbury Rd
Tsimshatsui, Kowloon, Hong Kong

Capsula is a robot construction set. Looks like a series of bubbles
connected together. Some intriguing modules including IR control,
voice commands, motorized clutches etc. Edmund Scientific sells this
as do many toy stores.
_________________________________________________________________

_Circuit Specialists Inc_



PO Box 3047
Scottsdale, AZ 85271-3047
tel: 800.528.1417
tel: 602.464.2485

Quickshut robot arm sold by Circuit Specialists for $259. Appears to
be a nice low cost 5 axis arm for education. IBM (or compatible)
interface, kit including all components and board, power supply kit,
software package, logic probe and experiments and instructions. If
anyone has information as to who actually makes this please send me
email. CSI has a FAX back service at 1(800)622-5426. At the voice
prompt, enter 3060 for more information on the arm. The software
package supplied includes test routines and Robot control proceedures.
The software is written in BASIC and Assembly languages.
_________________________________________________________________

_The Electronic Gold Mine_



PO Box 5408
Scottsdale, AZ 85261
tel: 602.451.7454

Roamer Robot Kit. A simple, hardwired robot kit with all parts
necessary to complete the kit. It sells for $39.95.
_________________________________________________________________

_FischerTechnik_
[Germany]



Fischerwerke
Arthur Fischer GmbH & Co. KG
Weinhalde 14-18
D-72178 Waldachtal
tel: germany 07443/12-487
fax: germany 07443/12-591

[USA]



Model Technologies
2420 Van Layden Way
Modesto, CA 95356
tel: 209.575.3445
fax: 209.575.2750
url: [63]Fischertechnik

[UK] Economatics Ltd



Epic house, Darnell Road
Attercliffe, Sheffield
United Kingdom
tel: +44 742 56 11 22
fax: +44 742 43 93 04
telex: 5 47 095 ECOMAT G

Like Lego, Fischertechnik is a european-developed construction kit but
much more comprehensive in scope. Electro-mechanical parts galore
including a wide variety of switches, relays, slip rings, contacts,
etc. Many types of building block units as well and computer
interfaces available. More expensive than Lego. Model Technology,
listed above, is one distributor. See also the Robot Explorer in the
publications section.

Here is a listing of some of the kits that they build: Interface for
Macintosh: "Service II" from Boenig and Kallenbach, sold by



Pandasoft Uhlandstrasse 195 D-1000
Berlin 12
fax: 030 315913-55

For DM 498.- for Mac Plus or better. 8 digital in and outputs, 2
analoguous inputs. With Hypercard Stack Computing Experimental and
driver software for all Pascal versions, 4th Dimension and Ragtime
(comparable to MSWorks). Works also with the FischerTechnik Robot and
Plotter assembly kit, 80 pages manual in german?, 3 Diskettes.

There are also computing kits containing interfaces for C64, PC and
Apple II.

Profi Computing by Fischer Technik:
"High-end" kit, 3 motors, 6 switches, 4 lights, 2 fotocells, 20
plugs patch bay, construction base-support plate, 12 models
explained as there are a robot with a controlled hand, a
plotter, a slot-machine, a credit-card reader and a CD-player
(certainly without audio out), 888 parts in total: DM 376,
needs the Service II interface.

Training robot by Fischertechnik:
3 rotation axes which may be controlled simultaneously. Working
radius between 12 and 37 cm, fetching height: 6 to 25 cm,
driven by 3 Fischer Technik S-motors, positioning with infrared
photocell, with cabling and manual, needs the Service II
interface, for DM 547.

Plotter/Scanner by Fischertechnik:
Scanning head not included, "heavy duty" construction,
precision less than 0.5 mm on a A4 surface, driven by 2 bipolar
stepper motors, needs the Service II interface. For DM 487.-

Computing by Fischertechnik:
10 models possible, all explained: antenna rotor, Plotter,
Graphic Tablet, 2-axis robot etc., needs Service II and power
supply for DM 298.-

One source for Fischertechnik that was claimed to be the best,
cheapest and fastest source is Tim King. He stocks a full line of all
the kits as well as the individual components, including repair parts
or service.



Tim King Electronics
14595 Oceana
Allen Park, MI, 48101
tel: 313.928.2598

_________________________________________________________________

_Graymark International_



Box 2015
Tustin, CA 92681
tel: 800.854.7393

Graymark sells a variety of electronic kits, like Heathkit used to,
and some small robot kits that resemble the OWI kits. (see below)
Currently they sell a small sound-controlled robot "Scooter" (601A), a
line finder "blinky" (602A) , and a small programmable robot "Copycat"
(603A) and computer interfaces for the Copycat (parallel, serial and
microprocessor interface. Robots are from $19 to $57 and interfaces
are $18-$41.
_________________________________________________________________

_Johuco, Ltd._



Box 390
Vernon, CT 06066

Muramator and Photovore. These are simple robot control boards that
are hardwired but can be adjusted using potentiometers. They sell bare
PCBs and you can get the parts from Radio Shack or DigiKey. The PCBs
sell for about $25.00.
_________________________________________________________________

_Khepera Support Team_



LAMI - DI - EPFL
INF Ecublens
1015 Lusanne
Switzerland
tel: ++41 21 693.52.65
fax: ++42 21 693.52.63
net:
contact: Franscesco Mondada

Web site is at [64]http://lamiwww.epfl.ch/Khepera

A VERY small mobile robot. Motorola 68331 Processor with 256K RAM and
256 or 512K ROM. Serial port. Six 10bit analog inputs. DC motor
powered with incremental encoders. Eight IR proximity and light
sensors. NiCd batteries. Additional capabilities can be added by using
stackable K-extension bus. Software environments: Calm assembler (PC
or MAC), Gnu C compiler (on all machines supported by GNU) and LabView
(PC, Mac or Sun).

* Size: 55mm diameter, 30mm high
* Weight: 70grams
* Cost: 3000 Swiss Francs [About $2K US]
* Vision and Gripper modules under development.

See also:
Mondada et al. Mobile Robot Miniaturisation: A Tool for Investigation
in Control Algorithms. Third International Symposium on Experimental
Robotics, Kyoto, Japan, Oct 28-30, 1993
_________________________________________________________________

_LEGO_



Lego Dacta
555 Taylor Road
PO Box 1600
Enfield, CT 06083-1600
tel: 800.527.8339
fax: 203.763.2466

Canadian office for Lego/Dacta: tel: 800-387-4387.

LEGO Dacta is the educational branch of the LEGO company. Dacta sells
the LEGO Technic product line. These are the geared and motorized
versions for the LEGO system.

Use anonymous ftp to obtain a list of a variety of lego information
and application programs from:
[65]ftp://earthsea.stanford.edu/pub/lego/


CAD/ contains several languages for specifying models
faq/ contains latest faq sheet for alt.toys.lego
games/ Rules for games using lego people and pieces
images/ Pictures and drawings of sets and instructions
sets/ Database listings of lego sets and catalog numbers
upload/ Place your files here!

Lego kits recommended for robotics work include:
1038 Technical Universal Buggy - dual drive vehicle. $60
1032 Technic II w/ motorized transmission - $76
9605 Technic Resource Set - general parts kits - $200
Lego-to-Mac software:
Paradigm Software at tel:617.576.7675
Bots at tel: 415.949.2126
MIT has papers on LEGO projects available via FTP from:
[66]ftp://kame.media.mit.edu/pub/el-memos. The files are in
memo8.* "LEGO/LOGO: Learning Through and About Design"

_________________________________________________________________

_M & T Systems_



POB 7816
Huntington Beach CA 92615
Contact M &T Systems at:
tel: 714.969.3166
fax: 714.969.3167
net: mand...@ix.netcom.com

[Tom Thorton] The HexWalker(tm) walking robot kit is based on the
Insectoid built by Gary Malolepsy of The Robotics Society of Southern
California (RSSC), and chronicled in the February, March and April
1994 issues of Robot Builder (the newsletter of RSSC). The Insectoid
robot was given passing mention by Scott Edwards in the June 1994
issue of Nuts and Volts (How Far Can a Stamp Take You?).

RSSC Club Officers had discussed kitting the walking robot up for
members for several months, but had taken no action. Finally, I built
one for myself. It generated so much attention at meetings that I
decided to kit it out. The HexWalker(tm) robot kit is the result.

As supplied in the kit the Hexwalker(tm) robot detects the world by
means of two feelers. Normal movement for HexWalker(tm) is to walk
forward using the opposing triangle gait. When the robot detects an
obstacle (when a feeler switch closes) it pauses, backs up several
steps, turns left or right, and resumes forward walking. HexWalker(tm)
turns left when the right feeler switch closes, or right when the left
feeler switch closes.

HexWalker(tm) is large enough to work on easily. It measures 8 1/2
inches (22cm) long (plus feelers), 6 1/2 inches (16cm) wide, and 2 1/2
inches (6cm) tall. It is strong, able to support its own weight (12
ounces) plus about an 8 ounce payload.

Modifying the basic robot is encouraged. Ideas for
modification/improvement include: Substitute LED photodetectors for
the feeler/snapswitch sensors. Add a second Stamp to HexWalker(tm)
that performs sensor monitoring functions. Add additional sensors to
HexWalker(tm).

* Backup sensor to prevent walking into objects when walking
backwards.
* Down sensor to detect "cliffs" and prevent walking off edges.
* Sonar for long range sensing."


HexWalker(tm) sells for US $125.00.
California residents add 7.75% sales tax.
Shipping throughout North America is US $3.00.
Shipping to all others is US $15.00.
The kit without Basic Stamp (if you have your own controller)
is US $100.00 plus s &h.
The construction manual alone is US $10.00 plus US $1.00 s &h.

_________________________________________________________________

_Meccano/Erector_



Headquarters:
363, avenue de Saint-Exupery
62104 CALAIS CEDEX - FRANCE
Tel. 21.96.63.90
Fax. 21.96.34.35
In the US:
888 Seventh Avenue
New York, NY 10106

Erector sets have been around for over 80 years and many interesting
things can be built with these construction sets. There are several
mechanical construction systems available. The best source of info
I've seen is a list put together by Colin Hinz at
[67]ftp://psych.toronto.edu/pub/meccano

The German model train company, Maerklin makes a Meccano compatible
construction set. They also have a 1007 Robotic Arm kit and
programmable controller as well. ~$300 You may be able to order it
through a local train and hobby shop.

_________________________________________________________________

_Mondotronics_



524 San Anselmo Ave.,
#107
San Anselmo, CA 94960
tel: 415.455.9330
800.374.5764 (orders)
fax: 415.455.9333
800.455.9333 (orders)
net: in...@mondo.com

A wide variety of Nickel-Titanium Alloy products. Mondo can supply an
email brochure as well as a Muscle Wire FAQ. Products include:

Muscle Wire Project Book- New 3rd Edition. Presenting everything you
need to successfully design, build, and operate devices with Muscle
Wire - nickel-titanium filaments that actually contract when
electrically powered and lift thousands of times their own weight.

Topics include: Basic lever action, ratchets and latches, model
railroad crossing, AC power circuit, solar power circuit, paper
airplane launcher, life-like butterfly, rubber tube "flexi",
proportional control, radio control interface, programmable multiple
wire controller & serial port interface, PC parallel port interface
and much more. Boris the six-legged motorless miniature walking
machine.

BORIS - A miniature motorless six-legged walking machine
SPECIFICATIONS
Length: 13.5 cm
Height: 4.5 cm
Weight: 30 grams
Power & Drive:
- Eight 100 um dia. Muscle Wires (50 centimeters total).
- 6 volts, 500 milliamp max.
- Full software control via PC parallel printer port.

-

MUSCLE WIRES PROJECT BOOK 3-133 $17.95

MUSCLE WIRES PROJECT BOOK & DELUXE KIT
Includes meter each of Flexinol 050, 100 and 150, plus crimps and
instructions. Enough to build all the projects in the Project Book
including Boris the motorless walking machine. An ideal starter
package for engineers, students and experimenters of all ages.

Project Book & Deluxe Kit 3-168 $59.95

MUSCLE WIRES RESEARCH & DEVELOPMENT PACKAGE
A complete package designed for corporate and laboratory Research and
Development work with shape memory alloys. Includes the following:
* Muscle Wires Project Book
* Five meters each of Flexinol 050, 100 and 150
* One meter of Flexinol 250
* Crimps & instructions

Muscle Wires R & D Package 3-102 $249.00 A wide variety of NiTiNol
lengths and diameters are also available. Send email to
in...@mondo.com.
_________________________________________________________________

_OWI (Movit robots)_



1160 Mahalo Place
Compton, CA 90220-5443
tel: 310.638.4732
fax: 310.638.8347

Many educational toy store, hobby stores, and electronic parts stores
carry these kits. Also available from:


Jayso Electrnics 800.426.4422 or 212.798.1050
Pitsco 800.835.0686
Edmund Scientific 609.573.6260 (See Robot Parts Section)
Hobbico 800.637.7660

These are small toy-like robots that reflexively respond to obstacles,
sounds or light depending on the model. They're cute and show what can
be done with a relatively small amount of hardware. The top of the
line model is the Wao II which has two 'feelers' for bump sensors and
can be programmed with an on board key-pad or via a host computer. It
sells for $89.95. Most of the other robot kits sell for between $35
and $55. The kits usually only require mechanical hardware assembly
(no soldering required.) Edmund also has a Robotic Technology
Curriculum with lessons and tests featuring the Movit robots.
Curriculum is $65 from Edmund Scientific.
_________________________________________________________________

_Reality Robots_



Marvin Green,
821 SW 14th, Troutdale, OR 97060
tel: 503.666.5907
net: mar...@agora.rdrop.com

Starter Kits

The B-BOT Frame:
This is a complete robot frame with a 360 degree bumper skirt
and clear head dome. The frame is six inches in diameter and
uses two modified RC servos (not included). The B-BOT can be
controlled by a small microcontroller, such as the BOTBoard,
Mini Board, PIC or BASIC STAMP. The B-BOT Frame is expandable,
flexible, and makes it easy to get your robot projects off the
ground quickly.
The B-BOT Frame and assembly manual is $29.95. The B-BOT jr.
(smaller, with single level base) is $19.95. Please add $4.00
shipping for first kit, $1.00 for each additional kit. Please
make check or money order to Marvin Green at the above address.

The BOTBoard:
The BOTBoard is a bare printed circuit board designed for
robotic applications. The BOTBoard uses the popular 68HC11
microcontroller in a minimum configuration, and is easily
programmed >from your PC. Engineered to be flexible, the
BOTBoard is also powerful and easy to use. Each board measures
2" X 3" and contains 38 I/O pins, and a small prototyping area.

The BOTBoard is $5.95 each, or three for $15.00. Add $1.25 plus
$.25 for each board for shipping.

The ARMBOT:
The ARMBOT is a flexible three axis robotic arm. It is designed
to use small unmodified RC servos and a microcontroller. The
ARM-BOT provides clockwise and counter clockwise rotation of
greater than 180 degree, shoulder lift of greater than 45
degree a gripper range of about two inches. The ARMBOT is
surprisingly strong. It's fun to use, and can easily be build
within a couple of hours.
The ARMBOT kit and instruction manual is $12.95. Please add
$2.00 shipping and handling.

NOTE: These kits are designed to spark your intuitive engineering
skills. Each kit comes with a detailed manual, assembly instructions,
diagrams, parts list, and all the custom parts needed to build the
kit. Common parts, such as RC servos or ICs are not included because
they can be purchased elsewhere. Keep in mind that you may need to
drill some holes or use a soldering iron.

real_bot.zip contains three gif images of the ARMBOT and B-BOT.
[68]ftp://cherupakha.media.mit.edu/pub/incoming/real_bot.zip
Seattle Robotics Society BBS: (206) 362-5267

I designed these kits to help inspire people to build robots. The kits
are high quality and inexpensive. Please contact me for more
information. mar...@agora.rdrop.com
_________________________________________________________________

_Rug Warrior_



A K Peters
289 Linden Street
Wellesley, MA 02181
tel: 617.235.2210
fax: 617.235.2404
net: kpe...@geom.umn.edu
url: [69]http://www.tiac.net/users/akpeters

A companion kit for the book, Mobile Robots: Inspiration to
Implementation. See [70]Books section of this FAQ. The Rug Warrior
circuit board is designed to support the construction of small, yet
sophisticated mobile robots. The board provides all the processing,
memory, and sensor circuitry needed for a custom designed robot.
$289.00. Does not include chassis, skirt and motors.

Rug Warrior offers the following features: Motorola MC68HC11
microcontroller, LCD display (32 alphanumeric characters), 32K of
battery backed RAM, RS-232 serial port, Collision detection from any
of 6 directions, Photoresistor light sensors, Infrared obstacle
detection, Microphone for sound detection, Piezoelectric buzzer
generates tones of arbitrary frequency, Motor driver chip allows
control of two DC motors, Dual shaft encoders allow velocity/position
control, Four user controllable LEDs, Optional pyroelectric (heat)
sensor, Expansion capabilities for more sensors and actuators.

The kit consists of a circuit board with the logic and interface
components already soldered on and tested, plus all the sensors and
other circuitry needed to build the robot board as described in our
book "Mobile Robots: Inspiration to Implimentation."

The kit includes Interactive C (IC) on a disk for either Mac or PC.
Self test routines are also provided for each of the standard sensors
and actuators. In the near future A. K. Peters plans to offer a
complete robot kit including chassis, skirt, and motors.

The "Mobile Robot Kit", Rug Warrior from AK Peters is now available in
the "IBUKI Trading Post" on the WWW. The URL for the Trading Post is:
[71]IBUKI The "Rug Warrior" can be found under "Toys toys from IBUKI"
on the "Robots" page. More robot kits will be coming soon. If you want
one listed please contact IBUKI. Questions or comments can be sent to
IBUKI from the pages of the Trading Post or by sending email to
[72]r...@ibuki.com
_________________________________________________________________

_Stiquito_
The Stiquito is a small muscle-wire actuated robot developed by Jon
Mills and his students at Indiana University.

Stiquito is a small six-legged robot that you customize by adding
sensors, controllers, power sources, etc. The robot provides an
inexpensive platform to study computational sensors, subsumption
architectures, neural gait control, emergent cooperative behavior, and
machine vision. It is currently being used for research at IU, and, at
a ratio of one robot per student, in "VLSI for Robotics" and "Machine
Learning" classes.

Stiquito is small (3cm H x 7cm W x 6cm L) and simple (32 parts)
because its legs are propelled by nitinol actuator wires. Each leg has
one degree of freedom. The robot walks up to 10 centimeters per minute
and can carry a 9-volt cell, a MOSIS "tiny chip" and power transistors
to drive the nitinol actuator wires. Alternatively, power and control
can be supplied through a tether.

After being innundated with requests for the unit, sales of the kits
are now being handled by Robotic Systems. Robotic Systems offers a kit
to build the Stiquto II walking robot The kit is $45 and includes a
PCB for a PC-based controller (Mac version coming soon).



[73]Robotic Systems, Inc.
1102 West Glen River Road
Glendale, Wisconsin 53217
url: [74]http://www.robotic.com
contact: Clint Laskowski, President
tel: 414.821.7675
fax: 414.963.4825

For more information including comprehensive technical reports on
Stiquito, please see
[75]http://www.cs.indiana.edu/robotics/stiquito.html

See [76]ftp://www.cs.indiana.edu/pub/stiquito/STIQUITO.INFO for an
overview of Stiquito and the files at Indiana.

Technical report TR 414 - _Stiquito II and Tensipede: Two
Easy-to-build Nitinol-propelled Robots_ is available in FINAL DRAFT
via anonymous ftp from [77]ftp://cs.indiana.edu/pub/stiquito

The report is archived as four .hqx (binhex encoded) .sea (stuffit
lite self-extracting archive) Microsoft Word 4, 5 & 6, available on
PCs. Macs should be able to read and print word 4 documents.

_________________________________________________________________

_TSS Lynxmotion_



Technical Service and Solutions
104 Partridge Road
Pekin, IL 61554-1403
contact: Jim Frye
tel: 309.382.1254
net: [78]jf...@dris.com
url: [79]www.lynxmotion.com

TSS is Home of the Lynxmotion Robotic Arm. It uses Scott Edwards Mini
SSC Controller.
* 5 axis (base rotate, shoulder, elbow, wrist and gripper)
* All axis' are closed loop.
* Can be completely battery powered by a 9V and 6V battery.
* Extremely easy to program and control with any serial port.
* Can utilize a PC, single board computer, PIC or even BASIC Stamp.
* Very fast, accurate and repeatable movement.
* Available in three different configurations.


_Basic kit_
Includes all hardware, structural components, a 27 page
detailed assembly manual with illustrations, and software. You
will need to provide the servos and a Mini SSC servo
controller.
Basic kit $60, additional $10 for software.
_Level 2 kit_
Includes all hardware, structural components, assembly manual,
software, 6 servos and a Mini SSC servo controller.
Level 2 kit $180
_Level 3 kit_
Completely assembled and tested robot ready to move.
$255 with software included

Please note that there are additional shipping charges. See TSS' home
page or contact TSS for more details.
_________________________________________________________________

_Tomy Armatron_

The Armatron was sold by Radio Shack in the US and was a popular small
plastic manipulator. A mobile version, the Mobile Armatron was also
sold. A number of articles appeared in the hobbyist press regarding
linking the Armatrons to computers. The Armatron is a clever, maybe
even brilliant, mechanical engineering feat that uses a single motor
to control all 6 degrees of motion AND the timer. The mobile version
is still being sold in Japan and is called the "GO ROBO ARM" You might
be able to pick one up at a flea market or garage sale. They have
shown up again in the Fall of 1994 in Radio Shack stores. Buy it -
they are neat, very clever, inexpensive and fun.

Articles:
* Computer Controlled Robot Arm, Jimmy Banas, Radio Electronics, pp.
49-53, and 117, May 1985. The control requires the addition of 6
DC motors, and machining of 'bearing blocks' to hold gears and
align shafts.
* Armatron: A Study in Arm Engineering, Mark Robillard, Robotics
Age, Nov/Dec 1982, Vol. 4 No. 6, pp.40-46 (cover photo too)
* Super Armatron, John J. Shiavone, Mike Dawson, and James E.
Brandeberry, Robotics Age, Jan 1984, Vol. 6, No. 1, pp. 20-28.

Myron A. Calhoun provided the following information on the Mobile
Armatron:

The four batteries are wired in series; the center is reference, so
there is +/- 2.5 volts to control the motor. Between the main body
(which holds the battery) and the control head is a color-coded
seven-wire flat cable. The BLACK wire is one side of reference; the
BROWN wire is the other side of reference, and the reference wire
color is WHITE. In the control head are two rheostats (ganged) to
control motor speeds by controlling applied voltage.

Wire
color | Controls | Details
-------+--------------+----------------------------------------------------
BLUE | main UP | BROWN (~250 ma.)
| arm DOWN | BLACK (~200 ma.)
| | This motor has a spring counterbalance to assist
| | "up" motion. I did not disassemble the main arm,
| | but suspect there is quite a lot of gearing inside.
| |
ORANGE | wrist UP | BROWN (~200 ma.)
| DOWN | BLACK (~200 ma.)
| | I did disassemble this arm, and there are SEVERAL
| | layers of geardown involved.
| |
RED | finger CYCLE | BLACK (~200 ma. when open, ~235 ma. closed)
| | The open/close cycle is caused by a cam.
| |
| wrist ROTATE | BROWN (~225-255 ma.)
| | A ratchet mechanism permits finger-cycling versus
| | wrist-rotation using just one motor. When the
| | motor turns one way a ratchet locks wrist turning
| | but allows finger cycling, and vice versa.
| |
YELLOW | left FORWARD| BROWN (~350 ma. when driven by itself)
| drive REVERSE| BLACK (~350 ma. when driven by itself)
| wheel |
| |
GREEN | right FORWARD| BROWN (~350 ma. when driven by itself)
| drive REVERSE| BLACK (~350 ma. when driven by itself)
| wheel | When both wheels are driven in the same direction,
| | the total current draw is ~475 ma. Internally, both
| | drive motors are actually in one unit; I suspect
| | there is some clutch interlock between them.

I disassembled most of the body/forearm/wrist (but NOT the main arm)
just for fun. Inside the main turret is a pedestal upon which is
mounted a small PC card which terminates all wiring. Coming up from
below are all seven wires from the flat cable plus several (thinner)
wires from the battery compartment and the motors. They connect to the
PC card IN THIS ORDER from left to right when viewing from the rear:

BLACK BROWN RED ORANGE YELLOW GREEN BLUE WHITE (common)

Going up into the arm mechanisms are three wires, RED/WHITE, ORANGE/
WHITE, and BLUE/WHITE, and associated with each is a white wire. In
general, the wiring is color-consistent; the RED-with-WHITE-stripe
wire connects to the RED terminal, the BLUE-with-WHITE-strip wire to
the BLUE terminal, all of the WHITE wires to the WHITE (common)
terminal, etc. But inside the base unit an ORANGE wire connected to
one end of the battery (opposite the BLACK wire connected to the other
end of the battery). I did NOT see a BROWN wire here as would be
expected. Myron.
_________________________________________________________________

_Ublige Software and Robotics Corporation_



P.O. Box 18034
Huntsville, AL, 35804-8034
net: [80]u...@delphi.com
url: [81]http://www.traveller.com/~insecta/
tel: 205.518.9422
contact: Luis Lopez

Kits and pre-assembled robot walkers (insects). USR produces
Electro-Optic components and software tools for compound eye robotics.
The catalog lists a low-cost walking system kit called Prometheus and
Sparticus on the order of $1500 (US). A number of control and I/O
modules are also available (eg. RS232 interface, data acquisition,
motor control module, motor driver etc.) Leg units are also sold
separately.

For USR's catalog, which includes a Video for Windows demo of their
robots in action and a selection of research articles, please send
check or money orderfor $3US within the United States or $7US for
outside the United States the address above.

_________________________________________________________________

_Zagros Robotics_



PO Box 460342
St. Louis, MO 63146-7342
tel: 314.768.1328
net: [82]zag...@Walden.MO.NET
contact: Atha Jamar Neal III

Zagros sells two robot kits. All you need to add is a CPU, and you
have a fully functional robot. Zagros offers their own HC11 based
processor board with 'C' compiler. The Mini Max has a maximum speed of
about 22.5 meters/minute. Each drive motor generates 1.1 Nm of torque.
The platform is 30cmx30cm 6mm thick industrial plastic. Zagros accepts
check, money order, COD, Discover, Visa and Mastercard.

Mini Max Robot Kit $129.95 (plus $15.00 shipping) This kit includes
the following:

* (2) 12 volt DC drive motors
* (2) 15cm drive wheels
* (1) caster wheel
* (1) base plane 30cm x 30cm
* (1) battery power supply
* (1) motor driver kit
* (1) book of project notes
* (1) solderless breadboard

MAX '96 ROBOT KIT $189.95 (plus $15.00 shipping)
* (2) 12 volt DC drive motors
* (2) 15cm drive wheels
* (2) caster wheels
* (1) base plane 41cmx41cm
* (1) battery power supply
* (1) motor driver kit
* (2) pulse encoders
* (1) book of project notes
* (1) solderless breadboard

_________________________________________________________________

*

[8.5] Entertainment Robots

While not quite in the mainstream of robotics research, there are a
number of companies catering to mainstream venues using animated
figures that are remotely controlled. These are often used to
entertain people in restaurants, at shows and conferences,promotional
events and at a variety of other types of gatherings.

_The Robot Factory_



3740 Interpark Drive
Colorado Springs, CO 80907
tel: 719.447.0331
fax: 719.447.0332
net: [83]in...@robotfactory.com
url: [84]http://www.robotfactory.com/

Robots for advertising, education and entertainment since 1966. The
major product categories available from The Robot Factory include
Talking signs, mobile robots, animated Musicians and customized
robots.
_________________________________________________________________

Last-Modified: Mon Sep 9 09:49:48 1996


[85]Kevin Dowling <ni...@cmu.edu>

References

1. file://localhost/usr/nivek/faq/HTML/copyright.html
2. file://localhost/usr/nivek/faq/HTML/TOC.html
3. file://localhost/usr/nivek/faq/HTML/8.html#8.1
4. file://localhost/usr/nivek/faq/HTML/8.html#8.1.1
5. file://localhost/usr/nivek/faq/HTML/8.html#8.1.2
6. file://localhost/usr/nivek/faq/HTML/8.html#8.2
7. file://localhost/usr/nivek/faq/HTML/8.html#8.3
8. file://localhost/usr/nivek/faq/HTML/8.html#8.4
9. file://localhost/usr/nivek/faq/HTML/8.html#8.5
10. http://www.robotics.com/
11. mailto:rpa...@iserv.net
12. http://www.infi.net/~cyberdog/
13. url: www.helpmaterobotics.com
14. http://isr.com/~isr
15. http://isr.com/~isr
16. mailto:sa...@rwii.com
17. http://www.rwii.com/
18. http://www.activmedia.com/RealWorld/RobotHome.html
19. http://www.newtonlabs.com/"
20. http://www.tag.co.uk/robots/
21. http://www.munc.com/
22. http://www.sover.net/~rovtech
23. mailto:rov...@sover.net
24. file://localhost/usr/nivek/faq/HTML/http;//www.adept.com/
25. mailto:esh...@pi.net
26. http://www.pi.net/~eshedbv/
27. http://www.eshed.com/
28. http://www.pi.net/~eshedbv/dealer.html
29. http://www.ise.bc.ca/
30. mailto:in...@ise.bc.ca
31. http://www.ar2.com/kawasak.htm
32. mailto:in...@kinetic.bc.ca
33. http://www.asi.bc.ca/asi/affiliates/kinetic/KSI_home_pg.html
34. http://www.asi.bc.ca/asi/affiliates/kinetic/KSI_home_pg.html
35. http://www.japan.hosting.ibm.com/komatsu/index-e.htm
36. file://localhost/usr/nivek/faq/HTML/www.quay.co.uk/labman/
37. mailto:robo...@aol.com
38. mailto:robo...@dial.pipex.com
39. http://ds.dial.pipex.com/robotics1/
40. http://www.seikorobots.com/
41. mailto:ki...@src.umd.edu
42. http://www.ai.mit.edu/people/dmiller/kipr/kipr.html
43. http://www.frc.ri.cmu.edu/~nivek/faq/3.html#3.3
44. gopher://etlport.etl.go.jp/
45. http://www.gmd.de/AGF-Anschriften.html
46. http://borneo.gmd.de/AS/janus/pages/janus.htm
47. http://ranier.oact.hq.nasa.gov/staff/Lavery.html
48. http://ranier.oact.hq.nasa.gov/telerobotics_page/telerobotics.html
49. http://maas-neotek.arc.nasa.gov/
50. http://robotics.jpl.nasa.gov/../robotics.html
51. http://tommy.jsc.nasa.gov/
52. http://www.ksc.nasa.gov/ksc.html
53. http://www.arc.nasa.gov/
54. http://www.kelly-afb.org/links/orgs/race/race.htm
55. mailto:ti-...@sadis01.kelly.af.mil
56. mailto:skna...@sadis05.kelly.af.mil
57. http://www.nosc.mil/robots/
58. http://www.nosc.mil/robots/people.html#Code37
59. http://www.nosc.mil/robots/people.html#Code74
60. http://www.robix.com/
61. ftp://ftp.robix.com/pub/robix
62. http://www.AngelusResearch.com/
63. http://www.phoenix.org/fischer/index.shtml
64. http://lamiwww.epfl.ch/Khepera
65. ftp://earthsea.stanford.edu/pub/lego/
66. ftp://kame.media.mit.edu/pub/el-memos
67. ftp://psych.toronto.edu/pub/meccano
68. ftp://cherupakha.media.mit.edu/pub/incoming/real_bot.zip
69. http://www.tiac.net/users/akpeters
70. file://localhost/usr/nivek/faq/HTML/4.html#4.2.1
71. http://www.portal.com/~rww/trading_post.html
72. mailto: r...@ibuki.com
73. http://www.robotic.com/
74. http://www.robotic.com/
75. http://www.cs.indiana.edu/robotics/stiquito.html
76. ftp://www.cs.indiana.edu/pub/stiquito/STIQUITO.INFO
77. ftp://cs.indiana.edu/pub/stiquito
78. mailto:jf...@dris.com
79. http://www.lynxmotion.com/
80. mailto:u...@delphi.com
_________________________________________________________________

[9] What is a Robot Architecture?

A robot 'architecture' primarily refers to the software and hardware
framework for controlling the robot. A VME board running C code to
turn motors doesn't really constitute an architecture by itself. The
development of code modules and the communication between them begins
to define the architecture.

Robotic systems are complex and tend to be difficult to develop. They
integrate multiple sensors with effectors, have many degrees of
freedom and must reconcile hard real-time systems with systems which
cannot meet real-time deadlines [Jones93]. System developers have
typically relied upon robotic architectures to guide the construction
of robotic devices and for providing computational services (e.g.,
communications, processing, etc.) to subsystems and components. These
architectures, however, have tended thus far to be task and domain
specific and have lacked suitability to a broad range of applications.
For example, an architecture well suited for direct teleoperation
tends not to be amenable for supervisory control or for autonomous
use.

One recent trend in robotic architectures has been a focus on
behavior-based or reactive systems. Behavior based refers to the fact
that these systems exhibit various behaviors, some of which are
emergent [Man92]. These systems are characterized by tight coupling
between sensors and actuators, minimal computation, and a
task-achieving "behavior" problem decomposition.

The other leading architectural trend is typified by a mixture of
asynchronous and synchronous control and data flow. Asychronous
processes are characterized as loosely coupled and event-driven
without strict execution deadlines. Synchronous processes, in
contrast, are tightly coupled, utilize a common clock and demand hard
real-time execution.

_________________________________________________________________

Subsumption/reactive references

Arkin, R.C., _Integrating Behavioral, Perceptual, and World Knowledge
in Reactive Navigation_, Robotics & Autonomous Systems, 1990

Brooks, R.A., _A Robust Layered Control System for a Mobile Robot_,
IEEE Journal of Robotics and Automation, March 1986.

Brooks, R.A., _A Robot that Walks; Emergent Behaviors from a Carefully
Evolved Network_, Neural Comutation 1(2) (Summer 1989)

Brooks, Rod, _AI Memo 864: A Robust Layered Control System For a
Mobile Robot_. Look in [3]ftp://publications.ai.mit.edu/

Brooks, Rod, _AI Memo 1227: The Behavior Language: User's Guide_. look
in [4]ftp://publications.ai.mit.edu/

Connell, J.H., _A Colony Architecture for an Artificial Creature_, MIT
Ph. D. Thesis in Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, 1989.

Erann Gat, et al, _Behavior Control for Robotic Exploration of
Planetary Surfaces_ To be published in IEEE R &A. FTPable.
[5]ftp://robotics.jpl.nasa.gov/pub/gat/bc4pe.rtf
_________________________________________________________________

Insect-based control schemes

Randall D. Beer, Roy E. Ritzmann, and Thomas McKenna, editors,
_Biological Neural Networks in Invertebrate Neuroethology and
Robotics_, Academic Press, 1993.

Hillel J. Chiel, et al, _Robustness of a Distributed Neural Network
Controller for Locomotion in a Hexapod Robot,_ IEEE Transactions on
Robotics and Automation, 8(3):293-303, June, 1992.

Joseph Ayers and Jill Crisman, _Biologically-Based Control of
Omnidirectional Leg Coordination,_ Proceedings of the 1992 IEEE/RSJ
International Conference on Intelligent Robots and Systems, pp.
574-581.

_________________________________________________________________

Asynchronous/synchronous

(i.e., "traditional", "top-down", etc.)

Amidi, O., _Integrated Mobile Robot Control_, CMU-RI-TR-90-17,
Robotics Institute, Carnegie Mellon University, 1990.

Albus, J.S., McCain, H.G., and Lumia, R., _NASA/NBS Standard Reference
Model for Telerobot Control System Architecture (NASREM)_ NIST
Technical Note 1235, NIST, Gaithersburg, MD, July 1987.

Butler, P.L., and Jones, J.P., _A Modular Control Architecture for
Real-Time Synchronous and Asynchronous Systems_, Proceedings of SPIE

Fong, T.W., _A Computational Architecture for Semi-autonomous Robotic
Vehicles_, AIAA Computing in Aerospace conference, AIAA 93-4508, 1993.

Lin, L., Simmons, R., and Fedor, C., _Experience with a Task Control
Architecture for Mobile Robots_, CMU-RI-TR 89-29, Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University, December 1989.

Schneider, S.A., Ullman, M.A., and Chen, V.W., _ControlShell: A
Real-time Software Framework_, Real-Time Innovations, Inc., Sunnyvale,
CA 1992.

Stewart, D.B., _Real-Time Software Design and Analysis of
Reconfigurable Multi-Sensor Based Systems_, Ph.D. Dissertation, 1994
Dept. of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Carnegie Mellon
University, Pittsburgh. Available online at [6]STEWART_PHD_1994.ps.Z
It's 180+ pages.

Stewart, D.B., M. W. Gertz, and P. K. Khosla, _Software Assembly for
Real-Time Applications Based on a Distributed Shared Memory Model_, in
Proc. of the 1994 Complex Systems Engineering Synthesis and Assessment
Technology Workshop (CSESAW '94), Silver Spring, MD, pp. 217-224, July
1994.

_________________________________________________________________

Last-Modified: Sun Aug 11 08:50:22 1996


[7]Kevin Dowling <ni...@cmu.edu>

References

1. file://localhost/usr/nivek/faq/HTML/copyright.html
2. file://localhost/usr/nivek/faq/HTML/TOC.html
--
aka: Kevin Dowling, <niv...@cmu.edu> address: Carnegie Mellon University
tel: 1.412.268.8830 The Robotics Institute
fax: 1.412.268.5895 5000 Forbes Avenue
url: http://www.frc.ri.cmu.edu/~nivek Pittsburgh, PA 15213 USA
--
aka: Kevin Dowling, <niv...@cmu.edu> address: Carnegie Mellon University
tel: 1.412.268.8830 The Robotics Institute
fax: 1.412.268.5895 5000 Forbes Avenue
url: http://www.frc.ri.cmu.edu/~nivek Pittsburgh, PA 15213 USA

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