Students use LabVIEW to develop soccer-playing robot
Posted to News on 3rd Nov 2007, 12:23

Students use LabVIEW to develop soccer-playing robot

Engineering students have used National Instruments' LabVIEW to develop a humanoid robot and then evolve it so that is it capable of playing soccer.

Students use LabVIEW to develop soccer-playing robot

Engineering students from the Robotics & Mechanisms Laboratory (RoMeLa) at Virginia Tech, USA, have developed a bipedal humanoid robot using the National Instruments LabVIEW graphical system design platform. The Dynamic Anthropomorphic Robot with Intelligence (DARwIn) was originally developed to study human locomotion for the research and development of prosthetic limbs. DARwIn achieves the full range of motion and accurately imitates human movement so effectively that it was quickly modified to play soccer in RoboCup, an international robotic soccer competition created to promote research in robotics, artificial intelligence and related fields. As a result, it has been accepted as the first-ever USA entry into RoboCup in the humanoid division.

Dr Dennis Hong, Director of RoMeLa, says: "Our students used LabVIEW to design an expandable software platform as well as serve as DARwIn's brain, giving it the ability to perform high-level tasks, including playing soccer. Development time was also reduced by simulating how DARwIn would behave when performing certain tasks and being able to quickly design, prototype and deploy simulated code to an embedded target."

Using LabVIEW, one graduate student with no prior image processing experience was able to use IMAQ Vision to configure two IEEE 1394 cameras and, in just two hours, write a VI that identified and physically located the relative position of a soccer ball. This ease of use made it possible to create DARwIn's soccer-playing behaviour in just one week.

Educational benefits

Ray Almgren, National Instruments' Vice President of Product Marketing and Academic Relations, comments: "National Instruments is proud to be collaborating with Dr Hong and his talented students on such an impressive project. We see tremendous educational benefits in using the LabVIEW graphical system design platform, and projects like DARwIn are a testament to the things students are able to accomplish with embedded design."

RoMeLa, which uses multiple robotic platforms, required a system that could be easily configured for different hardware setups. Students were able to create an expandable computer architecture using the LabVIEW Real-Time Module to accommodate a range of sensors including those incorporated in IEEE 1394 cameras, RS-485 communication devices and multiple wireless networks. LabVIEW controls DARwIn's motion over RS-485 and can read joint positions on the same serial network from the servo motors' built-in potentiometers. While the robot is walking or moving, a rate gyro with acceleration and orientation information communicates with LabVIEW over an RS-232 serial connection so that the program modifies the walking gait to balance the robot in real time.

The LabVIEW graphical system design approach is popular in robotics design because it gives users the ability to design, prototype and deploy embedded systems using graphical programming with programmable hardware.

For more information on this application, readers can view Virginia Tech's winning entry for the NIWeek 2007 Virtual Instrumentation Applications Paper Contest by visiting www.ni.com/niweek/best.htm. For more information about RoMeLa, visit www.me.vt.edu/romela. Alternatively, use the form on this page to request a callback or more information about LabVIEW.


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