2015 MAJOR FINALS SCHEDULE
This is the first industrial forum as a satellite event of RoboCup World Competition and Symposium.
Demo Challenge and Workshop on Benchmarking Service Robots
Live result for RoboCup 2015 is online! You can keep abreast of the progress and results here
Read moreThe 19th RoboCup World Competition and Symposium Participation Guideline
Read moreIntel (China) now becomes a sponsor of RoboCup 2015. The Intel’s sponsorship includes two concrete contributions to the event. First, Intel (China) will undertake the first industrial forum in the RoboCup initiative---RoboCup 2015 Ecosystem Summit. Second, Intel (China) also beco
Read moreThis year, we introduce a new award sponsored by Flower Robotics, named “RoboCup Design Award”. All participants team has a chance to be the candidate of this award.
Read moreRoboCup 2015 is coming!
Read moreThe main focus of the RoboCup competitions is the game of soccer, where the research goals concern cooperative multi-robot and multi-agent systems in dynamic adversarial environments. All robots in this league are fully autonomous.
Read moreWithout the necessity to maintain any robot hardware, the RoboCup Simulation League’s focus comprises artificial intelligence and team strategy. The simulation league comprises 2D and 3D soccer simulation.
Read moreSmall Size robot soccer is one of the RoboCup league divisions. Small Size robot soccer, or F180 as it is otherwise known, focuses on the problem of intelligent multi-agent cooperation and control in a highly dynamic environment with a hybrid centralized/distributed system.
Read moreIn the Middle Size League (MSL) two teams of five autonomous robots play soccer on a 18 x 12 meter indoor field. Each robot is equipped with sensors and an on-board computer to analyse the current game situation and successfully play soccer.
Read moreThe RoboCup Standard Platform League is a RoboCup robot soccer league, in which all teams compete with identical robots. The robots operate fully autonomously, i.e. there is no external control, neither by humans nor by computers. The current standard platform used is the humanoi
Read moreIn the Humanoid League, autonomous robots with a human-like body plan and human-like senses play soccer against each other. Unlike humanoid robots outside the Humanoid League the task of perception and world modeling is not simplified by using non-human like range sensors. In add
Read moreThe RoboCup Logistics League Sponsored by Festo is a league of the annual international robotics competition RoboCup. It focuses on in-factory logistics applications.
Read moreThe RoboCup@Home league aims to develop service and assistive robot technology with high relevance for future personal domestic applications. It is the largest international annual competition for autonomous service robots and is part of the RoboCup initiative.
Read moreRoboCupJunior is targeted for primary and secondary school students. There is no fixed minimum age, but primary students are expected to be able to read (and hence write programs for their robots) on their own, without significant help from adult mentors.
Read moreRoboCup@Work is a new competition in RoboCup that targets the use of robots in work-related scenarios.
Read moreThe RoboCupRescue Robot League is an international league of teams with one objective: Develop and demonstrate advanced robotic capabilities for emergency responders using annual competitions to evaluate, and teaching camps to disseminate, best-in-class robotic solutions.
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