The Naval Postgraduate School (NPS) has teamed up with RoboNation and Open Robotics to host the first-ever Virtual RobotX (VRX) competition, an international, university-level challenge designed to broaden students’ exposure to autonomy and maritime robotic technologies.
VRX is a virtual simulation designed to further the Office of Naval Research (ONR) sponsored biennial RobotX Challenge. Students will be tasked with developing algorithms and software to command a simulated Unmanned Surface Vehicle (USV), performing prescribed tasks in a simulation environment built by NPS researchers.
“RobotX is the premier competition that focuses on autonomy,” said Brian Bingham, Director for the Consortium for Robotics and Unmanned Systems Education and Research (CRUSER) at NPS. “They use a standard platform and are tasked with a series of challenges in a physical domain that requires them to build on the autonomy, using not only real-world applications but look forward, beyond what we are working on the industrial side.
“The idea is to get people excited about defense and security applications and make them aware of those opportunities,” he continued.
Officially launched in Singapore in 2014, and continued in Honolulu in 2016 and 2018, RobotX began as a collaboration between ONR and RoboNation, a non-profit organization looking to build an open community of technologists and engineers interested in the future of autonomous technologies.
Some of the autonomous functions that RobotX has tried to tackle include how to autonomously dock a vessel, and how to perceive different buoys and aides of navigation.
“This is the introduction of the first ‘virtual competition’ aspect of RobotX,” said Bingham. “The competition will be hosted by NPS and include similar tasks as the physical one but it will all be in a simulated environment. This provides the facility and the capability for teams to be able try their autonomy in a virtual world and allows them to perform better.
“Teams will submit their solutions online and they will be run completely on the cloud,” he continued. “The competition is distributed, meaning the teams will submit their solutions as software products that we will evaluate in a very methodical way.”