PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

An Internet for robots

Cloud-computing platform for robots launched

2013-03-11
(Press-News.org) Researchers of five European universities have developed a cloud-computing platform for robots. The platform allows robots connected to the Internet to directly access the powerful computational, storage, and communications infrastructure of modern data centers - the giant server farms behind the likes of Google, Facebook, and Amazon - for robotics tasks and robot learning.

With the development of the RoboEarth Cloud Engine the team continues their work towards creating an Internet for robots. The new platform extends earlier work on allowing robots to share knowledge with other robots via a WWW-style database, greatly speeding up robot learning and adaptation in complex tasks.

More intelligent robots

The developed Platform as a Service (PaaS) for robots allows to perform complex functions like mapping, navigation, or processing of human voice commands in the cloud, at a fraction of the time required by robots' on-board computers. By making enterprise-scale computing infrastructure available to any robot with a wireless connection, the researchers believe that the new computing platform will help pave the way towards lighter, cheaper, more intelligent robots.

"The RoboEarth Cloud Engine is particularly useful for mobile robots, such as drones or autonomous cars, which require lots of computation for navigation. It also offers significant benefits for robot co-workers, such as factory robots working alongside humans, which require large knowledge databases, and for the deployment of robot teams." says Mohanarajah Gajamohan, researcher at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology (ETH Zurich) and Technical Lead of the project.

"On-board computation reduces mobility and increases cost.", says Dr. Heico Sandee, RoboEarth's Program Manager at Eindhoven University of Technology in the Netherlands, "With the rapid increase in wireless data rates caused by the booming demand of mobile communications devices, more and more of a robot's computational tasks can be moved into the cloud."

Impact on jobs

While high-tech companies that heavily rely on data centers have been criticized for creating fewer jobs than traditional companies (e.g., Google or Facebook employ less than half the number of workers of General Electric or Hewlett-Packard per dollar in revenue), the researchers don't believe that this new robotics platform should be cause for alarm. According to a recent study by the International Federation of Robotics and Metra Martech entitled "Positive Impact of Industrial Robots on Employment", robots don't kill jobs but rather tend to lead to an overall growth in jobs.

### Further information:

Press kit: http://www.roboearth.org/media

RoboEarth blog: http://www.roboearth.org/archives/1869

Original software release: http://rapyuta.org/rapyuta-the-roboearth-cloud-engine

Concept video: http://youtu.be/4-ir1ieqKyc

Peer-reviewed publication: D. Hunziker, M. Gajamohan, M. Waibel, R. D'Andrea. Rapyuta: The RoboEarth Cloud Engine, accepted for publication at the International Conference on Robotics and Automation (ICRA) 2013, Available: http://roboearth.org/uploads/RCE2013.pdf END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Researchers solve riddle of what has been holding 2 unlikely materials together

Researchers solve riddle of what has been holding 2 unlikely materials together
2013-03-11
For years, researchers have developed thin films of bismuth telluride (Bi2Te3) – which converts heat into electricity or electricity to cooling – on top of gallium arsenide (GaAs) to create cooling devices for electronics. But while they knew it could be done, it was not clear how – because the atomic structures of those unlikely pair of materials do not appear to be compatible. Now researchers from North Carolina State University and RTI International have solved the mystery, opening the door to new research in the field. "We've used state-of-the-art technology to solve ...

Amplified greenhouse effect shifts north's growing seasons

Amplified greenhouse effect shifts norths growing seasons
2013-03-11
Vegetation growth at Earth's northern latitudes increasingly resembles lusher latitudes to the south, according to a NASA-funded study based on a 30-year record of land surface and newly improved satellite data sets. An international team of university and NASA scientists examined the relationship between changes in surface temperature and vegetation growth from 45 degrees north latitude to the Arctic Ocean. Results show temperature and vegetation growth at northern latitudes now resemble those found 4 degrees to 6 degrees of latitude farther south as recently as 1982. "Higher ...

Nerve damage may underlie widespread, unexplained chronic pain in children

2013-03-11
Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) investigators have described what may be a newly identified disease that appears to explain some cases of widespread chronic pain and other symptoms in children and young adults. Their report that will appear in the April issue of the journal Pediatrics, and has received early online release, finds that most of a group of young patients seen at the MGH for chronic, unexplained pain had test results indicating small-fiber polyneuropathy, a condition not previously reported in children. The MGH investigators call this new syndrome juvenile-onset ...

Study: Antibiotics are unique assassins

2013-03-11
In recent years, a body of pub­li­ca­tions in the micro­bi­ology field has chal­lenged all pre­vious knowl­edge of how antibi­otics kill bac­teria. "A slew of papers came out studying this phe­nom­enon, sug­gesting that there is a gen­eral mech­a­nism of killing by antibi­otics," said Kim Lewis, Northeastern Uni­ver­sity Dis­tin­guished Pro­fessor in the Depart­ment of Biology and director of Northeastern's Antimi­cro­bial Dis­covery Center. The stan­dard thinking at the time was that the three main classes of bac­te­ri­cidal antibi­otics each had a unique way of killing ...

The household carbon emission per capita in Northwestern China is only 2.05 tons CO2 per year

The household carbon emission per capita in Northwestern China is only 2.05 tons CO2 per year
2013-03-11
The current international climate policy framework is mainly based on the national and regional level of macroscopic carbon emissions data, such as the regional per capita carbon emissions are often used as the indicator to measure the fairness of carbon emission rights. However, the per capita emissions based on regional macro data can not accurately reveal the low carbon emissions of the poor within the region, and cover up the emission differences among people intra-country and intra-region, the household carbon emission data based on field surveys could compensate for ...

Why people put themselves under the knife

2013-03-11
In a long-term study, Prof. Dr. Jürgen Margraf, Alexander von Humboldt Professor for Clinical Psychology and Psychotherapy at the RUB, investigated the psychological effects of plastic surgery on approximately 550 patients in cooperation with colleagues from the University of Basel. Patients demonstrated more enjoyment of life, satisfaction and self-esteem after their physical appearance had been surgically altered. The results of the world's largest ever study on this issue are reported by the researchers in the journal "Clinical Psychological Science". The aim of the ...

Environmental change impacts on migratory shorebirds differ for males and females

Environmental change impacts on migratory shorebirds differ for males and females
2013-03-11
Extensive shell fishing and sewerage discharge in river estuaries could have serious consequences for the rare Icelandic black-tailed godwits that feed there. But it is the males that are more likely to suffer, according to new research from the University of East Anglia. Research published today in the journal Ecology and Evolution reveals very different winter feeding habits between the sexes. Both males and females mainly consume bivalve molluscs, sea snails and marine worms, probing vigorously into soft estuary mud with their long beaks. But the study shows that ...

Coffee and tea during pregnancy affect fetal growth

2013-03-11
Drinking just two cups of coffee a day is associated with the risk of low birth weight. Researchers at Sahlgrenska Academy, University of Gothenburg, Sweden, have conducted a study on 59,000 women in collaboration with the Norwegian Institute of Public Health. Expectant mothers who consume caffeine, usually by drinking coffee, are more likely to have babies with lower birth weight than anticipated, given their gestational age. Researchers at Sahlgrenska Academy, University of Gothenburg, conducted a study on 59,000 pregnant Norwegian women in collaboration with the Norwegian ...

Evolution in the antibody factory

Evolution in the antibody factory
2013-03-11
This press release is available in German. Immune system B cells play a crucial role in the defence of pathogens; when they detect such an intruder, they produce antibodies that help to combat the enemy. They concurrently and continuously improve these molecules to more precisely recognize the pathogens. A team of scientists with participation of the Helmholtz Centre for Infection Research (HZI) has discovered that during this process the cells are able to advance their own evolution themselves by increasing the selection pressure through previously-produced antibodies. ...

Neck injuries linked to high costs for patients and spouses, reports study in Spine

2013-03-11
Philadelphia, Pa. (March 11, 2013) - Patients with neck injuries incur increased health and social costs—which also affect their spouses and may begin years before the initial injury, reports a study in the March 1 issue of Spine. The journal is published by Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, a part of Wolters Kluwer Health. Some individuals and families seem more susceptible to experiencing socioeconomic consequences of neck injury, according to the new research by Dr Poul Jennum of University of Copenhagen and colleagues. Particularly for patients who develop chronic ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

AI judged to be more compassionate than expert crisis responders: Study

Scale-up fabrication of perovskite quantum dots

Adverse childhood experiences influence potentially dangerous firearm-related behavior in adulthood

Bacteria found to eat forever chemicals — and even some of their toxic byproducts

London cabbies’ planning strategies could help inform future of AI

More acidic oceans may affect the sex of oysters

Transportation insecurity in Detroit and beyond

New tool enables phylogenomic analyses of entire genomes

Uncovering the role of Y chromosome genes in male fertility in mice

A single gene underlies male mating morphs in ruff sandpipers

Presenting CASTER – a novel method for evolutionary research

Reforestation boosts biodiversity, while other land-based climate mitigation strategies fall short

Seasonal vertical migrations limit role of krill in deep-ocean carbon storage

Child mortality has risen since pandemic, new study shows

Super enzyme that regulates testosterone levels in males discovered in ‘crazy’ bird species

Study tracks physical and cognitive impairments associated with long COVID

Novel model advances microfiber-reinforced concrete research

Scientists develop new AI method to forecast cyclone rapid intensification

Interpreting metamaterials from an artistic view

Smoking cannabis in the home increases odds of detectable levels in children

Ohio State astronomy professor awarded Henry Draper Medal

Communities of color face greater barriers in accessing opioid medications for pain management

Researchers track sharp increase in diagnoses for sedative, hypnotic and anxiety use disorder in young adults

Advancement in DNA quantum computing using electric field gradients and nuclear spins

How pomalidomide boosts the immune system to fight multiple myeloma

PREPSOIL webinar explores soil literacy among youth: Why it matters and how educators can foster it

Imagining the physics of George R.R. Martin’s fictional universe

New twist in mystery of dinosaurs' origin

Baseline fasting glucose level, age, sex, and BMI and the development of diabetes in US adults

Food insecurity in pregnancy, receipt of food assistance, and perinatal complications

[Press-News.org] An Internet for robots
Cloud-computing platform for robots launched