麻豆传媒

 

Robots are awesome

- July 27, 2009

Auyon Siddiq watches as his robot attempts its final turn towards the target. (Bruce Bottomley Photo)

Harder, better, faster, stronger? Or slow and steady wins the robot race?

Most teams taking part in 麻豆传媒鈥檚 18th annual Electrical Engineering Robot Competition went for the jugular, designing robots to complete the 28 by 16-foot course and hit the button at its end for maximum reward (five points). But students Karen Pahlavan and Majd Alkaraki had a different strategy: take a more challenging but less risky route through the middle of the course, making it near-impossible to hit the button but ensuring a reliable three points every round.

They never lost a match. While the other 17 teams struggled in their more ambitious plans and often ended up with only two points, the duo and their robot鈥攁ppropriately named 鈥淒on鈥檛 Worry - Be Happy鈥濃攃oasted to the championship.

SEE MORE PHOTOS: Robocup

鈥淭he key lesson was our design process: always go through the simplest path,鈥 said Mr. Alkaraki after their win.

鈥淎nd don鈥檛 pay too much attention to what the other robots are doing,鈥 added Mr. Pahlavan. 鈥淒o what works best for you.鈥澛

The yearly competition is the culmination of Design Methods II (ECED-3901), a third-year engineering course where all class and lab time is devoted towards building an autonomous robot 鈥 no remote controls allowed. On its own, the robot must be able to navigate the obstacle course; the closer it gets to the goal, the more points it earns. The competition itself is worth 10 per cent of the students鈥 grade, with the bulk of their market coming from reports and labs guiding them through the hands-on construction process. It鈥檚 a teaching model that鈥檚 central to the course鈥檚 success, explains the man who created it 18 years ago.

鈥淚t鈥檚 always interesting to teach because for one month I tell them what to do, and then for two months they just fire questions at me,鈥 says electrical engineering professor Peter Gregson, who still teaches the course today. 鈥淭he learning opportunity is huge 鈥 students pay attention when they know that the discussion is being directly applied to their project.鈥

Students agree. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not like you have months to learn the process 鈥 you have to build as you go,鈥 says Auyon Siddiq, whose robot 鈥淢arvin, The Paranoid Android鈥 made it to the fourth round before being knocked out of the competition. 鈥淚鈥檝e probably learned more in this course than any other one at university.鈥

Building the robot is a rather intense experience; most students speak of long nights in the lab, frantic last-minute readjustments and at least one or two spontaneous (but controlled) small fires before all is said and done. And sometimes, the drama extends to competition day. Partway through the competition, Lance Taylor was doing a trial run with his robot, 鈥淧roject Gattica,鈥 when disaster struck.

鈥淚 thought the motor had stopped and I went to pick it up by the wheels,鈥 he said. 鈥淭he whole thing flipped over and crushed all the circuits. Stuff was catching on fire and everything.鈥

With the help of a lab technician, Mr. Taylor and his teammate Aaron MacNeill frantically soldered their robot and, miraculously, made it fit for competition again 鈥 so successfully, in fact, that it was one of the final three robots standing at the end.

It鈥檚 learning these intangible skills 鈥 project management, handing a crisis 鈥 that is every bit as important to the course as the technical accomplishments. 鈥淚t鈥檚 about reliability, robustness and strategy all working together on the course, and that鈥檚 a very good engineering lesson to learn,鈥 says Dr. Gregson. 鈥淚 think it鈥檚 a great opportunity to teach real engineering and to differentiate 麻豆传媒 as a design-focused engineering school.鈥