@COMMENT This file was generated by bib2html.pl version 0.90
@COMMENT written by Patrick Riley
@COMMENT This file came from Peter Stone's publication pages at
@COMMENT http://www.cs.utexas.edu/~pstone/papers
@Article(AIMag00-overview,
author="Silvia Coradeschi and Lars Karlsson and Peter Stone and Tucker Balch and Gerhard Kraetzschmar and Minoru Asada",
title="Overview of {R}obo{C}up-99",
journal="{AI} Magazine",year="2000",volume="21",number="3",
abstract={
RoboCup is an initiative aimed to promote the full
integration of AI and robotics research. Following
hte success of the first RoboCup-97 at Nagoya and the
second RoboCup-98 in Paris, the Third Robot World Cup
Soccer Games and Conferences, RoboCup-99, was held at
Stockholm during July 27th and August 4th, 1999 in
conjunction with the Sixteenth International Joint
Conference on Artificial Intelligence (IJCAI-99).
There were four different leagues: the simulation
league, the real robot small-size league, the real
robot middle-size league, and the Sony legged robot
league. The champion teams are CMUnited-99 (CMU,
USA) for the simulation league, CS Sharif (Sharif
University of Technology, Iran) for the middle-size
league, The Big Red (Cornell University, USA) for the
small-size league, and Les 3 Mousquetaires
(Laboratorie de Robotique de Paris, France) for the
legged robot league. The Scientific Challenge Award
was given to three research groups: Information
Science Institute, University of Southern CAlifornia
(ISI/USC), USA, Electrotechnical Laboratory (ETL),
Japan, and Chubu University, Japan for the
development of automated and statistical game
analysis systems and methodologies. RoboCup-2000,
the fourth Robot World Cup Soccer Games and
Conferences, will take place in Melbourne at the end
of August, 2000.
},
)