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Engineering |
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Henry
Samueli School of Engineering and Applied Science |
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Students Advance Sensor Network
Technology through Gaming System
Ragobot
team members (from left): David Lee, Jonathan Friedman,
Parixit Aghera and Advait Dixit. |
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“
I need a robot. Build me one that can play games,” asked electrical
engineering graduate student Aman Kansal, and with that, the
Real Action Gaming Robots, or ragobot, project was born.
Kansal and an interdisciplinary team of graduate student researchers in electrical
engineering professor Mani Srivastava's Networked Embedded Systems Lab designed
and built a team of robots and reconfigurable terrain for a mobile gaming system
that addresses many questions common to embedded sensor networks. They are the
first team to apply advanced embedded network technology to a real-world version
of strategy games like Warcraft or Age of Empires.
“There are three main purposes to the system we are building,” explained computer
science graduate student Parixit Aghera, “entertainment, education and testbed
research. It’s a more realistic deployment of autonomous robots than you could
achieve in simulations, and we’re using the momentum from the project to interest
more people in sensor networks.”
Ragobot is a novel testbed for embedded sensor networks and robotics for researchers
concerned with actuation and controlled mobility issues. The team is constrained
by real world parameters in trying to create a sensor network that will allow
them to play games in real time.
“Almost all sensor network applications – monitoring forest fires, following
bacteria contamination in the ocean, tracking vehicles in a field – involve the
same command and control paradigm you see in strategy games,” explained electrical
engineering graduate student researcher Jonathan Friedman. “You have limited
resources under your control that you would like to deploy in such a way as
to optimize the territory you can see and react to.”
To read the full article, click
here to view
the this feature in the Spring 2005 issue of UCLA Engineer,
now online.
For more information, contact Melissa Abraham
(mabraham@support.ucla.edu or 310/206-0540.)
04.15.05
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COPYRIGHT
2004 UCLA |
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