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[Project image] Minerva
This project is no longer active.

Head: Nicholas Roy
Contact: Nicholas Roy

Mailing address:
Carnegie Mellon University
Robotics Institute
5000 Forbes Avenue
Pittsburgh, PA 15213


Associated lab/group: Robot Learning Lab

For more information, see this project's homepage.

Jump to: Project Description | Personnel | Publications

Project Description

Minerva is a talking robot designed to accommodate people in public spaces. She perceives her environment through her sensors (cameras, laser range finders, ultrasonic sensors), and decides what to do using her computers. Minerva actively approaches people, offers tours, and then leads them from exhibit to exhibit.

The goal of the Minerva project is to bring robots closer to people. Recent progress in robotics and artificial intelligence has made it possible to build interactive mobile robots that operate highly reliably in crowded environments. In the next decade, robots like Minerva are expected to become part of many people's lives, where they will assist them in their everyday activities, perform janitorial services, or simply entertain them. This project is carried out jointly by Carnegie Mellon University's Robot Learning Laboratory and the University of Bonn's Computer Science Department III, and sponsored by the Lemelson Center at the National Museum of American History.

Past members

Name Title Email Address
Frank Dellaert PhD Student, CS
Dieter's personal homepage Dieter Fox Research Associate, CS dfox@cs.cmu.edu
Nicholas's personal homepage Nicholas Roy PhD Student, RI
Sebastian's personal homepage Sebastian Thrun Adjunct Associate Professor, MLD/CSD/RI (Adjunct) thrun@stanford.edu

Publications

Note: This list may not be comprehensive. It contains only those publications in the RI publications database. Entries are listed in reverse chronological order.


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