From Chinese RoboCup Committee

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(RoboCup Leagues)
(RoboCup Leagues)
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* ''RoboCup Soccer''
 
* ''RoboCup Soccer''
 
** Standard Platform League (formerly Four Legged League)
 
** Standard Platform League (formerly Four Legged League)
** Small Size League
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** [[Small Size League | Small Size League]]
** Middle Size League
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** [[Middle Size League | Middle Size League]]
 
** Simulation League
 
** Simulation League
 
*** [[2D Soccer Simulation | 2D Soccer Simulation]]
 
*** [[2D Soccer Simulation | 2D Soccer Simulation]]

Revision as of 15:44, 31 January 2013

RoboCup is an international robotics competition founded in 1997. The aim is to promote robotics and AI research, by offering a publicly appealing, but formidable challenge. The name RoboCup is a contraction of the competition's full name, "Robot Soccer World Cup", but there are many other stages of the competition such as "RoboCupRescue", "RoboCup@Home" and "RoboCupJunior".

The official goal of the project:

By mid-21st century, a team of fully autonomous humanoid robot soccer players shall win the soccer game, complying with the official rule of the FIFA against the winner of the most recent World Cup.

RoboCup Leagues

Team rUNSWift competing in the Standard Platform League at RoboCup 2010 in Singapore.
Team Osaka's humanoid robots

The contest currently has four major competition domains, each with a number of leagues and subleagues:

"2010 RoboCup Competitions" "Mixed Reality League"

  • RoboCup Rescue Rescue Leagues Homepage
    • Rescue Robot League
    • Rescue Simulation League
  • RoboCup@Home, "RoboCup@Home" which debuted in 2006, and focuses on the introduction of autonomous robots to human society.
  • RoboCupJunior
    • Soccer Challenge
    • Dance Challenge
    • Rescue Challenge
    • General

Each team is fully autonomous in all RoboCup leagues. Once the game starts, the only input from any human is from the referee. "A New Goal for Open Source"

Robocup

Venue Number of teams Number of countries Number of participants
RoboCup 2013 Eindhoven - The Netherlands
RoboCup 2012 Mexico City - Mexico 381 42 2,356
RoboCup 2011 Istanbul - Turkey 451 40 2,691
RoboCup 2010 Singapore 500 40 3,000
RoboCup 2009 Graz - Austria 407 43 2,472
RoboCup 2008 Suzhou - China 373See Official RoboCup site 35
RoboCup 2007 Atlanta - USA 321See RoboCup 2007 site 39See RoboCup 2007 site 1,966
RoboCup 2006 Bremen - Germany 440 35
RoboCup 2004 Lisbon - Portugal 345 37
RoboCup 2003 Padua - Italy 238 35
RoboCup 2002 Fukuoka - Japan
RoboCup 2001 Seattle - USA 141 22
RoboCup 2000 Melbourne - Australia 110 19
RoboCup 1999 Stockholm - Sweden 85 23
RoboCup 1998 Paris - France 63 19
RoboCup 1997 Nagoya - Japan 38 11

Robocup China Open

Event Venue Number of teams Number of participants
RoboCup China Open 2012 Hefei、Xuzhou、Nanjing、Changsha
RoboCup China Open 2011 Lanzhou - Gansu