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Learning robots
An exploded power plant, collapsed buildings after an earthquake, a burning vehicle loaded with hazardous goods – all of these are dangerous situations for human emergency responders. What if we could send robots instead of humans? Researchers at the Autonomous Motion Department work on fundamental principles required to build intelligent robots which one day can help us in dangerous situations. A key requirement for making this happen is that robots must be enabled to learn.
@mpi_year_book{year_book_trimpe_2015, title = {Learning robots}, abstract = {An exploded power plant, collapsed buildings after an earthquake, a burning vehicle loaded with hazardous goods – all of these are dangerous situations for human emergency responders. What if we could send robots instead of humans? Researchers at the Autonomous Motion Department work on fundamental principles required to build intelligent robots which one day can help us in dangerous situations. A key requirement for making this happen is that robots must be enabled to learn.}, year = {2015}, slug = {year_book_trimpe_2015}, author = {Trimpe, Sebastian}, url = {https://www.mpg.de/8960086/MPI-MF_JB_2015?c=11741001} }