Specialized Working Group Reveals its Analysis

-Macroswiss S.A
Cecilia Lagos

By Cecilia Lagos, Press Officer, -Macroswiss S.A

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NATO looks into the near future of military robotics

The IST-058/RTG-024 working group organized a workshop in Bonn, Germany, that led to their plan to bridge the gaps between military user requirements for robotics and industrial robotic capabilities expected by 2008.

About 70 people related to the military, industry, research and government areas, from sixteen mainly European countries, attended the NATO workshop named Bridging The Gap In Military Robotics making, for the first time, a deep and integral analysis on the subject.

Meetings were held during three days and the outcomes were divided in two major points: Military tasks and requirements and Technological gaps and the way to close them. The first one defines the tasks for which the military would most like to have robotic support by 2008. For the second one, six technological groups were organized, each for six different fields of technological interests that are expected to be developed in two more years.

On one hand, the working group identified the five most relevant military tasks, which are:

1. Reconnaissance and surveillance for tactical support for the forces on the ground including NBC.
2. De-mining - Tactical and post-conflict - clearing roads and fields from AP and AT mines.
3. Convoying - transport of goods.
4. Checking vehicles and people for explosives and weapons at checkpoints.
5. Carry equipment for dismounted soldier.

On the other hand, roadmaps were constructed to identify which actions should be taken to achieve, by 2008, the required level in the following six technological fields:

1. Communication.
2. Robot Platforms.
3. Sensing and world modeling.
4. Navigation and mission planning.
5. Human - robot interaction.
6. Multi-robot systems.

A 'Core Group' was established to keep the integrating outcomes of the workshop alive. This group is partially a NATO activity, which focuses on supporting military-like tasks by robots, and partially a EUROPEAN ROBOTICS activity, focusing on stimulating research to achieve goals relevant to the users and the industry.

For more detailed, in-depth information you must visit http://www.fgan.de/~natoeuro/EuropeanRobotics-WhitePaper.pdf to read the complete document, which was published by the following authors:

GROUP NAME
CommunicationF.E. Schneider
Human-robot interactionR. Granot
Human-robot interactionJ. Roning
Multi-robot systemsA. Winfield
Multi-robot systemsE.J.A. van Zijderveld
Multi-robot systemsL. Walle
Navigation and mission planningE. Colon
Robot PlatformsK. Pink
Robot PlatformsR. Castelli
Sensing and world modelingD. Krogmann

Working Group Contact: Mr. Frank Schneider - frank.schneider@fgan.de

Cecilia Lagos

Author Information - Cecilia Lagos

Press Officer

Cecilia is a Chilean journalist who became the new Macroswiss Press Officer in October 2005.

Before joining the company, Cecilia has worked in different areas in national radio, newspapers and TV, standing out her on-site covering of the World Trade Center attacks in 2001 for the Chilean TV and Radio while she was living in New York City.

Cecilia started her career very early, at the age of 14, writing a sports column in a national newspaper. Since then she never stopped working until she enrolled the Journalism school in Universidad Nacional Andrés Bello in Santiago.

In 1998, she moved to Argentina where she served as a summer correspondent for a national radio in Chile and then in 2000, after a few months back in Santiago, she moved to New York City where she enrolled a program in English Studies at the Kaplan International Center in Manhattan. Finally, in 2002 she studied at New York University, where she got her Journalism Diploma.

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