Spelman College Students Compete in International RoboCup in Japan--First Woman's College and the First Black Institution To Qualify For This Competition
Six female Spelman College students have qualified to compete in the international RoboCup competition in Japan in July 2005. Spelman is the first undergraduate school, the first woman's instition and the first Black institution to achieve this honor. The ladies will be practicing with their robots in a RoboCup Soccer field in the science lab at Spelman College until they leave for Japan.
Atlanta, GA (PRWEB) June 6, 2005 -- Shattering myths that women can’t be
leaders in science Spelman College students to compete in International RoboCup
2005 in Osaka, Japan. Countless hours of computer programming in between hitting
the books have paid off for these students, who have earned the College a
coveted spot in an international competition. From July 13-19, 2005, the
all-female team will be in Osaka, Japan, for RoboCup 2005, where they will
compete against 23 other academic institutions from around the world that have
also programmed Sony AIBO robot dogs. The Coca-Cola Company is sponsoring the
team to ensure they have the resources needed to successfully compete in this
prestigious competition.
The Japan competition is not the first major
match the students have experienced. The team also participated for the first
time in the third annual RoboCup U.S. Open on the campus of Georgia Tech, May
7-10, 2005. Spelman was one of eight U.S. schools competing in the tournament’s
four-legged league, which uses Sony AIBO robot dogs. In Japan, Spelman will be
only one of five U.S. teams competing. The others are Georgia Tech, University
of Pennsylvania, University of Texas at Austin, and Carnegie Mellon University.
The College is also the only undergraduate institution, the only historically
Black college or university and the only all-women’s institution to qualify for
Japan. “This is a great accomplishment for [Spelman] students,” said faculty
adviser Andrew Williams, Ph.D.
In preparation for both RoboCup
tournaments, students Aryen Moore-Alston, Brandy Kinlaw, Ebony Smith, Karina
Liles, Ebony O’Neal and Shinese Noble, along with Professor Williams, have
written complex algorithms or computer software programs – normally created by
graduate level students – that allow sophisticated Sony AIBO ERS-7 robot dogs to
not only play soccer using fundamental motions like kicking, passing and
blocking, but to also make decisions on game strategy, all without the use of a
remote control. The result: four Sony AIBOs programmed to play a competitive
game of soccer against another Sony AIBO team – quite a feat for a group of
Spelman computer science majors who have researched and studied robot control
systems for less than a year.
In Osaka, Japan, the Spelman College
RoboCup Soccer Team will go up against 23 other academic institutions from
around the world that have also programmed Sony AIBO robot dogs. For the
tournament in Japan, Spelman earned a spot by submitting a technical
application, which included video footage that demonstrated the team’s research
and technical approach.
By outward appearances, the tournaments may look
like fun, especially with a group of cute robot dogs as the center of attention,
but the team of researchers and students involved in RoboCup and other similar
tournaments, have a serious and far-reaching goal in mind: to eventually create
robots that will autonomously assist humans with simple and complex tasks.
Spelman President Beverly Daniel Tatum, Ph.D., and the Spelman community
are proud of the SpelBots, the name for the Spelman team. “The opportunity for
six young Black women to lead a robotics team in international competition is so
fantastic, and such a great testament to what is possible when the expectations
are high,” said Tatum. “It speaks to the continued importance of an institution
like Spelman. We still need environments where those who have been historically
left out are expected to succeed without the barriers often associated with
gender or race, particularly in science and technology.”
The Coca-Cola
Company is supporting the team with a $50,000 sponsorship, and NASA also is a
team sponsor. “The Coca-Cola Company continually seeks innovative programs to
help knowledge-hungry students make their dreams a reality, and SpelBots was a
wonderful opportunity for us to demonstrate our belief in a quality education,”
said Ingrid Saunders Jones, senior vice president, External Affairs, The
Coca-Cola Company, and chair of The Coca-Cola Foundation. “We congratulate all
of the students who have been working so hard, and thank President Tatum for her
leadership and her cultivation of this program.”
The program came to
fruition when Williams brought the idea of competing in the RoboCup tournaments
to Spelman last summer when he joined the faculty as an assistant professor in
the computer and information sciences department. Williams came to Spelman from
the University of Iowa, where he specialized in artificial intelligence for
robots and bioinformatics and where he was already doing research work with Sony
AIBOs and Tekkotsu, a robot-programming framework created by Carnegie Mellon
University. And because one team member, Moore-Alston, was corresponding with
Williams prior to his arrival to the College due to her interest in artificial
intelligence, it didn’t take long for him to recruit her and other students for
the SpelBots team.
Smith, a junior, who enrolled in one of Williams’
fall semester classes, recalls that she was instantly taken with his vision to
start a team that would compete in an international robot-soccer tournament.
Smith says that before she became involved with SpelBots, writing computer code
was one-dimensional. “Most of programs I wrote would just have a written
output,” she said. “But with the [robot] you can see your work as it progresses,
and I think that is important for computer-science majors at Spelman. This type
of cutting-edge work helps to draw students into the computer-science
field.”
“I am hoping SpelBots will continue year after year, and
eventually we’ll start to beat schools like Carnegie Mellon and Georgia Tech in
the RoboCup,” said Williams. “Spelman students are bright enough to do that. In
the short term, with SpelBots we want to provide role models for other young
ladies, and encourage them to go to graduate school. We want to show them
computer science and engineering can be fun, and they can do it because they are
just as talented, gifted and smart.”
Adds Kinlaw, a senior planning to go
on to graduate school, “I want younger Black women to look at the SpelBots team,
gain an interest in technology, and increase their knowledge of computer science
because they see exciting opportunities to excel in these areas.”
Founded
in 1881, Spelman College is the only historically Black college in the nation to
be included among U.S. News and World Report's Top 75 “Best Liberal Arts
Colleges – Bachelor’s,” 2005. This private, historically Black college for women
boasts outstanding alumnae such as Children's Defense Fund founder Marian Wright
Edelman; former Foreign Service Director General, Ruth Davis; authors Tina
McElroy Ansa and Pearl Cleage; and actress LaTanya Richardson Jackson. More than
81 percent of the full-time faculty holds Ph.D.s or other terminal degrees and
the student-faculty ratio is 12:1. The students number 2,121 and represent 41
states and 15 foreign countries.
SpelBots Photo Tags
Shinese Noble;
Karina Liles; Aryen Moore-Alston; Professor Andrew Williams, Faculty Advisor;
Ebony Smith; Ebony O’Neal; and Brandy Kinlaw
Contact:
Renita Mathis or
Bunnie Jackson-Ransom
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(404) 270-5013 or (404) 505-8188
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Source : http://www.prweb.com/releases/2005/6/prweb247981.htm