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Hidenori Kimura, renowned system and control theorist, turned 60
years of age in November, 2001. To celebrate this memorable
occasion, his friends, collaborators, and former students gathered
from all over the world and held a symposium in his honor on
November 1 and 2, 2001, at the Sanjo Conference Hall at the
University of Tokyo. Reflecting his current research interests, the
symposium was entitled "Cybernetics in the 21st Century:
Information and Complexity in Control Theory," and it drew nearly
150 attendees. There were twenty-five lectures, on which the
present volume is based. Hidenori Kimura was born on November 3,
1941, in Tokyo, just prior to the outbreak of the Second World War.
It is not hard to imagine, then, that his early days, like those of
so many of his contemporaries, must have been difficult.
Fortunately, the war ended in 1945, and his generation found itself
thoroughly occupied with the rebuilding effort and with Japan's
uphill journey in the last half-century. He entered the University
of Tokyo in 1963, received a B. S. in 1965, an M. S. in 1967, and,
in 1970, a Ph. D. degree for his dissertation "A Study of
Differential Games. " After obtaining his doctorate, he joined the
Department of Control En gineering at Osaka University as a
research associate, and in 1973 he was promoted to an associate
professor."
Hidenori Kimura, renowned system and control theorist, turned 60
years of age in November, 2001. To celebrate this memorable
occasion, his friends, collaborators, and former students gathered
from all over the world and held a symposium in his honor on
November 1 and 2, 2001, at the Sanjo Conference Hall at the
University of Tokyo. Reflecting his current research interests, the
symposium was entitled "Cybernetics in the 21st Century:
Information and Complexity in Control Theory," and it drew nearly
150 attendees. There were twenty-five lectures, on which the
present volume is based. Hidenori Kimura was born on November 3,
1941, in Tokyo, just prior to the outbreak of the Second World War.
It is not hard to imagine, then, that his early days, like those of
so many of his contemporaries, must have been difficult.
Fortunately, the war ended in 1945, and his generation found itself
thoroughly occupied with the rebuilding effort and with Japan's
uphill journey in the last half-century. He entered the University
of Tokyo in 1963, received a B. S. in 1965, an M. S. in 1967, and,
in 1970, a Ph. D. degree for his dissertation "A Study of
Differential Games. " After obtaining his doctorate, he joined the
Department of Control En gineering at Osaka University as a
research associate, and in 1973 he was promoted to an associate
professor.
Robots able to imitate human beings have been at the core of
stories of
science?ctionaswellasdreamsofinventorsforalongtime.Amongthe various
skills that Mother Nature has provided us with and that often go
forgotten, the ability of sight is certainly one of the most
important. Perhaps inspired by tales of Isaac Asimov, comics and
cartoons, and surely helped by the progress of electronics in
recent decades, researchers have progressively made the dream of
creating robots able to move and operate by exploiting arti?cial
vision a concrete reality. Technically speaking, we would say that
these robots position themselves and their end-e?ectors by using
the view provided by some arti?cial eyes as feedback information.
Indeed, the arti?cial eyes are visual sensors such as cameras that
have the function to acquire an image of the environment. Such an
image describes if and how the robot is moving toward the goal and
hence constitutes feedback information. This procedure is known in
robotics with the term visual servoing, and it is nothing else than
an imitation of the intrinsic mechanism that allows human beings to
realize daily tasks such as reaching the door of the house or
grasping a cup of co?ee.
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