Robotic helicopters teach themselves

Published: Sept. 3, 2008 at 9:46 AM

STANFORD, Calif., Sept. 3 (UPI) -- U.S. scientists say they have created robotic helicopters that can teach themselves to fly by "watching" other helicopters.

Stanford University Professor Andrew Ng, who led the project, said the achievement is an important demonstration of "apprenticeship learning," in which robots use an artificial intelligence system to learn by observing an expert, rather than by having software engineers write instructions.

Stanford's artificial intelligence system learned how to fly by "watching" a four-foot-long helicopter flown by expert radio control pilot Garett Oku.

While it might seem an autonomous helicopter could fly stunts by simply replaying the exact finger movements of an expert pilot using joy sticks on a remote controller, Ng said that's not possible due to many uncontrollable variables such as gusting winds.

So the researchers had Oku and other pilots fly entire air show routines while every movement of the helicopter was recorded. As each maneuver was repeated, the helicopter's trajectory inevitably varied slightly with each flight. But the learning algorithms created by Ng's team were able to discern the ideal trajectory the pilot was seeking.

Ng said there is interest in using autonomous helicopters for such duties as searching for land mines or mapping wildfire hot spots in real time.

© 2008 United Press International, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Order reprints



Additional News Stories
NHL: Atlanta 2, Florida 1 (SO) (19 min)
PGA: McDowell, Yang lead Chevron Worlds (22 min)
COL FB: Boise State 42, New Mexico St. 7 (24 min)
British photogs told to leave royals alone (45 min)
NBA: Charlotte 106, Philadelphia 105 (46 min)
NHL: Colorado 3, Columbus 2 (50 min)
NBA: Toronto 110, Chicago 78 (50 min)
fark
Hokey Pokey inventor gets body put in, body put out, body put in, not shaken all about
Cambridge University discovers that some condoms on campus contain little pricks
Turns out asexuality may not be a choice, either
MIT team wins DARPA balloon challenge. Thanks for all of your effort, Farkers. We put up a good...
If you notice an eight-foot red weather balloon today while you're driving around, please let Fark...
Today's Fark ready headline "Busy street, beaver don't mix"