The
US
Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency has renewed a $1.5m contract with
the
University
of Southern California to develop smart robo-dogs.
The robots were developed by Stefan Schaal, an associate professor in the USC
Viterbi
School of Engineering's
Department
of Computer Science.
The robo-mutts have four pointy feet ending in small balls, and are being
engineered to make their way across a treacherous terrain of broken rocks.
Schaal, who began working on the problem more than a year ago, said that
four-legged and six-legged robots have been walking around for years, but mostly
on smooth surfaces where wheels are a more efficient way of getting around.
"What you really want legged robots for is to negotiate difficult terrain,"
he explained.
The robots are built by
Boston
Dynamics and come with an onboard computer chip connected to sensors.
The device is continually aware of the location of its centre of gravity, and
adjusts a "smooth walking pattern generator with the selection of every foot
placement to follow a stable trajectory".
The robot calculates where and how it should proceed "based on the current
position, velocity and acceleration" of its legs. If one effort fails, the dog
learns from its mistake and tries another route.
After 15 months of experimentation, which involved sending back mechanical
dog "bodies" at a rate of one a month, but saving each one's digital electronic
experience, the dogs can now move, but not very quickly.
Maximum speed at this stage of development is 1.6cm a second, a little faster
than the 1.2cm/sec of the Mars Sojourner robot.
The goal in the next phase of the study is to triple the speed and double the
difficulty of the terrain so that the dogs also have to climb rocky ground with
a sharp slope.
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