B.R.A.I.N. ROBOTS | AI Hive Intelligence

Brain robots
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Brain Robots | AI Hive Intelligence

Brain robots operating on hive intelligence.

Links:

Creating Human Hive Minds | Total C2 System

Autonomy by Brain

MIT Robot Steals Human Brains to Help It Balance

The Plan to Build a Massive Online Brain for All the World’s Robots

The “JADE” in Jade Helm 15 is an A.I. Software Program

 

Brain robots went into effect on March 11, 2011, a tsunami and earthquake struck Fukushima Dai-ichi energy plant causing a major disaster. Since then emergency services have deployed robots to inspect the area and collect data. Some robot surveys were successful while others failed, underlining the pressing need to advance the state-of-the-art in autonomous Brain robots for disaster response. Further research is necessary, and so is testing in realistic environments. Shinji Kawatsuma, from the Japan Atomic Energy Authority (JAEA), urged in his outstanding talk in euRathlon 2013: “Don’t build robots, build brain robot systems”. And this is what euRathlon 2015 is all about: testing the capabilities of brain robot systems in realistic mock emergency-response scenarios. Challenge, where the overall aim is to advance the state-of-the-art in heterogeneous teams of autonomous hive mind vehicles. Multi-disciplinary and multi-organisational teams of students and engineers will survey the scene, collect data, search for missing workers, identify critical hazards, and more, all in a race against the clock. Of the sixteen teams that have qualified for euRathlon 2015, ten will participate in the Grand Challenge (sea, land and air) creating Brain robots a total of 6 multi-domain teams. Brain robots went into effect on March 11, 2011, a tsunami and earthquake struck Fukushima Dai-ichi energy plant causing a major disaster. Since then emergency services have deployed robots to inspect the area and collect data. Some robot surveys were successful while others failed, underlining the pressing need to advance the state-of-the-art in autonomous Brain robots for disaster response. Further research is necessary, and so is testing in realistic environments. Shinji Kawatsuma, from the Japan Atomic Energy Authority (JAEA), urged in his outstanding talk in euRathlon 2013: “Don’t build robots, build brain robot systems”. And this is what euRathlon 2015 is all about: testing the capabilities of brain robot systems in realistic mock emergency-response scenarios. Challenge, where the overall aim is to advance the state-of-the-art in heterogeneous teams of autonomous hive mind vehicles. Multi-disciplinary and multi-organisational teams of students and engineers will survey the scene, collect data, search for missing workers, identify critical hazards, and more, all in a race against the clock. Of the sixteen teams that have qualified for euRathlon 2015, ten will participate in the Grand Challenge (sea, land and air) creating Brain robots a total of 6 multi-domain teams.

 

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