The FIRST Regional Robotics Competition at BU's Agganis Arena draws experts, techies and lay-people.
The crowd at the Agannis Arena cheered as a man walking on robotic legs welcomed them to an event showcasing robotics and powered by
innovation, industry, and science.
Hugh Herr, director of the
Biomechatronics Group at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, kicked
off the Boston For Inspiration and Recognition of Science and Technology
Regional Robotics Competition in March. Herr -who lost his legs below
the knees in a climbing accident on Mount Washington- focused his
presentation on the potential for the field of robotics to
advance in countering disability caused by loss of use of human limbs.
He narrated a video featuring a soldier with a conventional
prosthetic limb with limited functionality played for the crowd.
"This gentleman was hit by a blast near Baghdad," Herr said. "He's
missing three limbs: two legs above the knee, and one arm below the
elbow. This is what current technology can provide."
"To me this
is unacceptable. We need to do a better job."
In each previous
year the robotics competition underwent a complete change. The game played at
the competition changed, as did the scoring system. In this way teams faced a new design challenge for their robot every year. In 2005 robots stacked objects built from PVC pipe called "tetras", scoring points based on an extremely complex system. In 2010 robots
could score two points by suspending above a raised platform or one
point by kicking balls into any of four nets on the playing field. With
six weeks to design, fund, and build a robot capable of scoring points
students innovated their robot designs. One team from New Jersey was up
to that task.
Team 1923 The Midnight Inventors of the West Windsor-Plainsboro Regional School District
designed a robot that could not only hang for two points but could also
score three points without the aid of an operator or a driver, during a
15-second autonomous period at the beginning of each game.
The team's entrepreneurship captain said the innovative nature of the
competition drives student ambition toward addressing such challenges as
Herr described.
"FIRST robotics is a prep...it's like a prep for
making robots that help people to make a change," Krishna, 17, said.
Mentors and volunteers who helped run the event and coach the teams
came from a variety of backgrounds.
Mark Bean, a mentor for
entrepreneurship for team 1923, works in wealth management. With the
Midnight Inventors he works to ensure the continuity of the team.
"It's one thing when you build a robot," Bean said. "It's another thing
when you have a robotics team that can survive and go on year upon
year."
Jack Kentfield, a plumber by trade, told a story
demonstrating the innovation level intrinsic to the event. In 2006, the
team he was coaching discovered that scouting opponents and potential
allies -teams ally with two other teams for each match- could be very
important. They put one member in the stands who crunched the numbers on
the other teams. He found an unlikely ally in a team in 58th place, out
of 60 teams.
"He found that this team won, or scored up to two
to three points every match because they were uncontested," Kentfield
said. "Because it was a team that nobody was afraid of, and through the
statistics he also found that most matches were won by two to three
points."
After choosing that alliance partner, Kentfield's team
went on to win the championship.
At one of the industry display
booths, Chris Budny an autonomy engineer of Textron Defense Systems said
the science that the event inspires drives technology.
"The
students, they can see they have a goal to strive for. They can really
achieve that goal to be the best. That's what's going to drive this
innovation, drives the competition for better things, increases
technology, and makes a better world."