We are chairing the International Conference on Advanced Humanoid Robotics Research, which will take place in Incheon, Korea, in August, 2009, co-located with the FIRA World Cup. Reviews were sent to authors in early May.  If your paper was accepted, please consider reviewers comments very carefully in preparing the final version of your manuscript!

On July 1st, Dr. David Barnard became the 11th President of the University of Manitoba. Since he is a computer scientist by trade, we were asked to be part of the welcoming ceremony in the Atrium by bringing out one of the robots. It was a bit of an awkward display, since the working infrared connectors for the humanoids were all away on competition, and the back-up cabling was a little finicky, but we still managed to get him up and waving.  More pictures in the associated gallery.


We just got the new Citizen (Eco-Be) MicroRobots this morning - two weeks before we have to deploy them at RoboCup! A quick comparison shows them to be squatter and a little bulkier than the first generation Citizens used at last year's Mixed Reality competition, but the design is just incredible. Note the removeable controller board, separating the control system from the robot body, and lots of foresight for future expansion of sensors. The control is much finer too, compared to the first generation, in that each wheel can be controlled at 30 different speeds in each direction.

Rodrigo Guerra put up a nice video demo of these units as well.

Our Humanoids placed third at the Euroby 2008 International Robotics competition in Linz.

The competition included sprinting, obstacle run, weightlifting, and basketball events.
More details are available at the Euroby Site.

RoboCup, in Suzhou, is also only two weeks away! A promotion for this just appeared on the main University of Manitoba website.

We will be be attending RoboCup 2018 in Montreal, the first time RoboCup has come to Canada!

The Autonomous Agents Laboratory is one of the research laboratories within the Department of Computer Science at the University of Manitoba, and is directed by Dr. John Anderson and Dr. Jacky Baltes. The goal of our work is the improvement of technology surrounding hardware and software agents as well as the development of applications employing these technologies. We are especially interested in cooperation in multi-agent settings, and the infrastructure necessary to support this and other forms of social interaction in intelligent systems.