researcher with student using robot

GTRI Hosts Students for Robotics Demo Day

04.25.2016

The Georgia Tech Research Institute (GTRI) hosted several high school groups as they toured Georgia Tech robotics exhibits during Georgia Tech’s Robotics Demo Day.

Roughly 200 students, employees and their children viewed the six robot demonstrations at the GTRI Conference Center. Researchers from the Aerospace, Transportation and Advanced Systems (ATAS) laboratory presented their research, which ranged from agile assembly to working with poultry and agriculture.

Researchers and their projects

  • Stephen Balakirsky, Agile Robotic Assembly

Robots demonstrate the ability to detect and understand objects in an assembly environment, create a simple assembly and detect potential errors.

  • Ai-Ping Hu, Agricultural Robotics

Robotic arms work in unstructured environments, such as chicken deboning and leaf picking.

  • Zsolt Kira, Perception Demo

Flying robot uses a camera for classification and detection.

  • Gary McMurray, Leaf Grasping

Autonomous robot collects leaves for disease inspection.

  • Sean Thomas, Automated Cone Loading

A Baxter-style robot automatically loads poultry products onto conveyor lines.

  • Colin Usher, GOHbot

The Chicken Grow-Out House Service Robot autonomously drives between two defined waypoints, avoiding stationary and mobile obstacles in its way.

“It is always important to show students interested in science and technology some of what we really do here at GTRI,” said ATAS Lab Director Rusty Roberts. “These students are able to see some of the exciting and groundbreaking work that scientists and researchers do.”

Nearly 40 groups with as many as 60 students to as few as five attended some of the demonstrations located around the campus. Roughly 20 projects on Georgia Tech’s campus greeted the students on April 1, 2016, in celebration of National Robotics Week.

Newsletter

Sign up for monthly updates on GTRI’s research, activity, and more.

Related News

| News stories
A dozen Georgia Institute of Technology researchers, including four from the Georgia Tech Research Institute (GTRI), were recognized as DARPA Risers during the agency’s recent DARPA Forward conference in Atlanta.
| News stories
NASA will launch Lunar Flashlight, a small satellite (SmallSat) about the size of a briefcase that will use lasers to search for water ice inside craters at the Moon’s unexplored South Pole. Georgia Tech and GTRI have been instrumental in the development of the Lunar Flashlight mission. Mary Kate Broadway, a student assistant in GTRI’s Electro-Optical Systems Laboratory (EOSL), who has academic and professional experience in modeling and fabrication, was called upon to create a near 1:1 model of the Lunar Flashlight SmallSat.
| News stories
GTRI provides innovative solutions that positively impact the state, nation, and world. Chief Information Officer Raj Vuchatu embodies this mission in both his role at GTRI and his volunteer efforts.