4.4 • 1K Ratings
🗓️ 7 August 2019
⏱️ 31 minutes
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Aaron Johnson, Assistant Professor, Mechanical Engineering, Carnegie Mellon University, delivers an informative overview of the future of robotics.
Johnson’s work focuses on the design of intelligent interactions between a robot and its specific environment. Johnson is interested in the practical applications of robotics, taking robots out of a lab or industrial setting and putting them in the real world. Johnson’s areas of study have varied widely, from unique robot design and behavior design to platform and controller design, dynamic transitions, physics-based planning and management, robot vision, bio-inspired robotics, ethics, and more.
Johnson elaborates on the complex environments in which robots are expected to flourish. As he explains, advanced robots are often designed and tested in environments that are created with a robot’s movement and needs in mind. But what happens when robots enter the real world and are faced with impediments, such as debris, clutter, or uneven surfaces, not typically found in an industrial factory setting? Johnson explains how these problems relate to progress gained in the development of autonomous vehicles. And even in engineered environments, variations and difficulties can exist, such as lighting that makes painted road lines or information difficult to see. Johnson talks about these issues and more that impact robot design and the improvements that are on the horizon.
The mechanical engineering professor talks in detail about robotic vision, sensors, and how much information can be collected. He discusses data and computational limits, and how these limits can be overcome through advancing technologies. Johnson discusses the various kinds of robots that he works within his lab and the bioinspiration that is driving some of their work.
Johnson received a BS in electrical and computer engineering from Carnegie Mellon University, and a Ph.D. in electrical and systems engineering from the prestigious, University of Pennsylvania.
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1:08.0 | Health Podcast. My guest is Aaron Johnson. He's an assistant professor of |
1:12.2 | Mechanical Engineering at Carnegie Mellon University. |
1:15.3 | We've been talking about robots, getting him out of the lab and having him do real world stuff, like navigating |
1:22.0 | Rocky Hills and cluttered houses and things like that. |
1:24.4 | So, Aaron, thanks for coming. |
1:26.7 | Thanks for having me. |
1:27.7 | Yeah, so, you know, it sounds simple, but how difficult is it just on its face to get robots to work in complex environments like people's homes or you know restaurants or you know outside various terrain? Yeah, it's it's very challenging because the where |
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