May 15, 2007
Carnegie Mellon Adds Four More 'Bots to Robot Hall of Fame: Hopping, Self-driving and LEGO Robots Join Star Trek's Data
BOSTON: A hopping robot that revolutionized thinking about walking robots,
the first car to steer itself on a coast-to-coast U.S. trip, a kit that made
it possible for anyone to build robots and the fictional android Data from Star Trek: The Next Generation” are the 2007 inductees into Carnegie Mellon
University's Robot Hall of Fame.
The four inductees "the one-legged Raibert Hopper, the NavLab 5 self-steering
vehicle, the LEGO Mindstorms kit and Lieutenant Commander Data”
were announced today during a luncheon at the fourth annual RoboBusiness Conference
and Exposition at the Hynes Convention Center in Boston.
"This is the first time since we established the Robot Hall of
Fame in 2003 that most of the inductees are real robots rather than
those of science fiction,"¯ said Matt Mason, director of Carnegie Mellon's Robotics
Institute. "As much as we love fictional robots such as Data, those of
us in the robotics field take heart when the real
accomplishments of our colleagues
get this well-deserved recognition."¯
Inductees in the Robot Hall of Fame (www.robothalloffame.org) are chosen by
an international jury of leading thinkers and technology developers. Some members
of the first three induction classes include the Mars Pathfinder Rover; Honda's ASIMO walking robot; the HAL 9000 computer from 2001: A Space Odyssey¯;
the "Star Wars"¯ duo of R2-D2 and C-3PO; and Gort, the metallic giant
from "The Day the Earth Stood Still."¯
"The great robots of science fiction, such as Gort, have a powerful hold
on people's imaginations, which is why we honor them and their creators,"
said Don Marinelli, executive producer of Carnegie Mellon's Entertainment
Technology Center. "It's precisely because Data was not confined
by real-world limitations that he could address philosophical questions, such
as whether a machine can have rights."
Lt. Cmdr. Data: Portrayed by actor Brent Spiner during the 1987-1994 run of "Star Trek: The Next Generation", Data was the chief operations
officer of the U.S.S. Enterprise starships and possessed both super-strength
and an encyclopedic memory. Data played a pivotal role on questions of
robot 'right to life' matters and human/machine philosophies,"
said juror Ray Jarvis, director of the Intelligent Robotics Research Centre
at the Australian National University.
"In one episode,"¯ recalled fellow juror Anne Balsamo, "Data
is put on trial to determine whether he has the right to refuse to submit to
a procedure that would disassemble him. During the trial, it is determined that
Data is not 'property,' like a computer or a toaster, but rather
a sentient life form entitled to rights of self-determination," said Balsamo,
managing director of the Institute for Multimedia Literacy at the University
of Southern California.
Raibert Hopper: No one would mistake the Raibert Hopper for sentient life,
but experiments with the one-legged device in the early 1980s showed how a machine
such as Data might someday walk with the agility of a human, rather than the
plodding gait of early walking robots. When roboticist Marc Raibert established
the Leg Laboratory at Carnegie Mellon in 1980 (he would move it to the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology in 1986), he believed robots, just like humans, needed
to rely on motion for stability, the principle of dynamic balance,
if they were ever to become speedy.
The one-legged Hopper was ideal for studying dynamic balance because it could
not stand still, but had to keep moving to stay upright. "The Raibert
Hopper was the visionary effort that set the entire field of robotic locomotion
in motion," Mason said. The lessons learned with the Hopper proved central
for biped, quadruped and even hexapod running. Raibert is now president of the
robotics firm he founded, Boston Dynamics.
NavLab 5: This robot was one of a series of autonomous vehicles developed at
Carnegie Mellon. NavLab 5 looked much like a standard GM minivan, but computers
and video sensors made it capable of steering itself at legal speeds on everyday
roads and highways.
NavLab 5's crowning achievement was "No Hands Across America,"¯
a 1995 cross-country tour on which it did 98 percent of the driving. "This
was the first time that any autonomous vehicle had traversed so much different
terrain," said juror Chuck Thorpe, a NavLab pioneer who is now dean of
Carnegi's Qatar campus. "It's not just a matter of
purple mountains majesties. It's a matter of painted lines on asphalt
vs. reddish concrete vs. Botts dots reflective markers in California, all of which make a big difference in how the road looks to a robot.
LEGO Mindstorms: This building set combined programmable bricks with electric
motors, sensors and structural parts to create robots and other interactive
systems. It went on sale retail in 1998. In a partnership with the MIT Media
Lab, an educational version was also released. The next generation, LEGO Mindstorms
NXT, was released last year with curriculum packages developed by Carnegie Mellon,
Tufts University and Vernier Software.
"This kit did more to take creative robotics to the masses than just
about any other retail product,"¯ said juror Illah Nourbakhsh, associate
professor in Carnegie Mellon's Robotics Institute.
Juror Joanna Haas, director of Pittsburgh's Carnegie Science Center,
agrees. "LEGO has made robotics truly accessible to a broad audience ,
children and adults alike, and the Mindstorms sub-brand supports wildly
popular play and learning in homes, classrooms and museums all around the world."¯
News
release with photos
Contact:
Anne Watzman
412.268.8525
aw16@andrew.cmu.edu
Byron Spice
412.2668.9068
bspice@cs.cmu.edu