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RoboCup
Annual robotics competition From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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RoboCup is an annual international robotics competition founded[1] in 1996 by a group of university professors (including Hiroaki Kitano, Manuela M. Veloso, Itsuki Noda and Minoru Asada). The aim of the competition is to promote robotics and AI research by offering a publicly appealing – but formidable – challenge.

The name RoboCup is a contraction of the competition's full name, "Robot World Cup Initiative" (based on the FIFA World Cup), but there are many other areas of competition such as "RoboCupRescue", "RoboCup@Home" and "RoboCupJunior". Claude Sammut is the current president of RoboCup, and has been since 2019.
The official goal of the project is:
- "By the middle of the 21st century, a team of fully autonomous humanoid robot soccer players shall win a soccer game, complying with the official rules of FIFA, against the winner of the most recent World Cup."[2]
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RoboCup leagues
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The contest currently has six major domains of competition, each with a number of leagues and sub-leagues. These include:
- RoboCup Soccer
- Standard Platform League (formerly Four Legged League)
- Small Size League
- Middle Size League
- Simulation League
- Humanoid League
- RoboCup Rescue League
- Rescue Robot League
- Rescue Simulation League
- Rapidly Manufactured Robot Challenge
- RoboCup@Home,[4] which debuted in 2006, focuses on the introduction of autonomous robots to human society
- RoboCup@Home Open Platform League (formerly just RoboCup@Home)
- Robocup@Home Domestic Standard Platform League
- RoboCup@Home Social Standard Platform League
- RoboCup Logistics League, which debuted in 2012, is an application-driven league inspired by the industrial scenario of a smart factory
- RoboCup@Work,[5] which debuted in 2016, "targets the use of robots in work-related scenarios"
- RoboCup Junior[6]
- Soccer League
- OnStage (formerly Dance) League
- Rescue League
- Rescue CoSpace League
Each team is fully autonomous in all RoboCup leagues. Once the game starts, the only input from any human is from the referee.[7]
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RoboCup editions
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The formal RoboCup competition was preceded by the (often unacknowledged) first International Micro Robot World Cup Soccer Tournament (MIROSOT) held by KAIST in Taejon, Korea, in November 1996. This was won by an American team from Newton Labs, and the competition was shown on CNN.[11]
RoboCup was canceled in 2020 due to COVID-19. The planned host location of Bordeaux will host in 2023.
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RoboCup Asia-Pacific editions
European RoboCupJunior Championship
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RoboCup local events
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2024
- German open in Kassel
2023
- German open
2021
- RoboCup Kazakhstan, Nur-Sultan, Kazakhstan
- RoboCup Portugal Open, virtual
- RoboCup Russia Open, Tomsk, Russia
- RoboCup Brazil Open, virtual
2020
- RoboCup Japan Open 2020, virtual
- RoboCup China Open 2020, virtual
- RoboCup Brazil Open 2020, virtual
2019
- RoboCup Portuguese Open 2019, Gondomar, Portugal
- RoboCup Brazil Open 2019, Rio Grande, Brazil
- RoboCup Asia Pacific 2019, Moscow, Russia
- RoboCup German Open 2019, Magdeburg, Germany
- RoboCup China Open 2019, Shaoxing, China
2018
- RoboCup Portugal Open 2018, Torres Vedras, Portugal
- RoboCup Asia Pacific 2018, Kish Island, Iran
- RoboCup Iran Open 2018, Tehran, Iran
- RoboCup UAE 2018, Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates
- RoboCup German Open 2018, Magdeburg, Germany
2017
2016
2015
2014
2013
2012
2011
2010
- RoboCup Portugal Open, Leiria, Portugal
- Iran Open 2010, Tehran, Iran
- Latin America & Brazil Open 2010, São Bernardo do Campo, Brazil
- RoboCup Mediterranean Open 2010, Rome, Italy
- RoboCup German Open (unofficial all-European tournament), Magdeburg, Germany
- AUT Cup 2010, Tehran, Iran
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See also
- Robot
- Botball
- FIRST
- BEST Robotics
- RobotCub Consortium, a humanoid robot project to study cognition via robotics
References
External links
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