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OpenDR

OpenDR

Open deep learning toolkit for robotics

In recent years, there has been a rapid increase in both demand for and interest in robotics. This is because robots provide possible solutions for the automation industry as well as new tools to assist in scientific research; they can also be used for commercial purposes. But despite these rapid advances, the robotics industry has been facing a lot of challenges, one of them being how to best prepare the robot for various situations and environments. The EU-funded OpenDR project aims to develop and introduce a modular, open and non-proprietary toolkit that will assist with the development and assortment of core robot functionalities while also using deep learning to improve their perception and cognition capabilities.

Goal

The aim of OpenDR is to develop a modular, open and non-proprietary tool kit for core robotic functionalities by harnessing deep learning to provide advanced perception and cognition capabilities, meeting in this way the general requirements of robotics applications in the applications areas of Healthcare, Agri-Food and Agile Production. The term toolkit in OpenDR refers to a set of deep learning software functions, packages and utilities used to help roboticists to develop and test a robotic application that incorporates deep learning. OpenDR will provide the means to link the robotics applications to software libraries (deep learning frameworks, e.g., tensorflow) and to link it with the operating environment (ROS). OpenDR focuses on the AI and Cognition core technology in order to provide tools that make robotic systems cognitive, giving them the ability to a) interact with people and environments by developing deep learning methods for human centric and environment active perception and cognition, b) learn and categorise by developing deep learning tools for training and inference in common robotics settings, and c) make decisions and derive knowledge by developing deep learning tools for cognitive robot action and decision making. As a result, the developed OpenDR toolkit will also enable cooperative human-robot interaction as well as the development of cognitive mechatronics where sensing and actuation are closely coupled with cognitive systems thus contributing to another two core technologies beyond AI and Cognition. OpenDR will develop, train, deploy and evaluate deep learning models that improve the technical capabilities of the core technologies beyond the current state of the art. It will enable a greater range of robotics applications that can be demonstrated at TRL 3 and above, thus lowering the technical barriers within the prioritised application areas.

Funding source

H2020 ICT-10-2019-2020 - Robotics Core Technology, Grant agreement ID: 871449

Coordinating organisation

Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Greece

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