Autonomous robots research advances.9781604561852 Autonomous robots Autonomous robots are robots which can perform desired tasks in unstructured environments without continuous human guidance. Many kinds of robots have some degree of autonomy. Different robots can be autonomous in different ways. research advances. Ed. by Weihua Yang yang (yang) [Chinese] in Chinese philosophy, the active, positive, masculine principle that is complementary to yin; see yin, under principle. . Nova Science Publishers 2008 356 pages $129.00 Hardcover TJ211 Given the most common definition, a number of common household or industrial devices perform tasks without continuous human guidance, but the contraptions and concepts described here go far beyond the household dishwasher or the paint sprayer on the assembly line. Contributors of these 11 articles report on robots that can be used in dangerous or dirty situations in construction, underwater vehicles with independent navigation and control systems, vision systems applicable to intelligent autonomous vehicles A passenger vehicle that drives by itself. Also known as the "driverless car," it automatically steers the vehicle by sensing the painted lines in the road or a magnetic monorail embedded in the road. In the late 1990s, prototype systems were built in Italy and the U.S. See automotive systems. (two articles with different approaches), behavioral multi-agent control architectures, advanced lane detection for autonomous automobile navigation, vehicle path planning for narrow passages with goal positioning, perception through scattered Scattered Used for listed equity securities. Unconcentrated buy or sell interest. media for autonomous vehicles, conceptual design and modeling of a mobile parallel manipulator The introduction to this article provides insufficient context for those unfamiliar with the subject matter. Please help [ improve the introduction] to meet Wikipedia's layout standards. You can discuss the issue on the talk page. , and very large scale integration architectures for autonomous robots. ([c]20082005 Book News, Inc., Portland, OR) |
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