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In recent yearswe haveseen considerableadvances in the development
of - manoid robots, that is robots with an anthropomorphic design.
Such robots should be capable of autonomously performing tasks for
their human users in changing environments by adapting to these and
to the circumstances at hand. To do so, they as well as any kind of
autonomous robot need to have some way of understanding the world
around them. We humans do so by our senses, both our far senses
vision and hearing (smelling too) and our near senses touch and
taste. Vision plays a special role in the way it simulta- ously
tells us "where" and "what" in a direct way. It is therefore an
accepted factthatto
developautonomousrobots,humanoidornot,itisessentialto- clude
competent systems for visual perception. Such systems should embody
techniques from the ?eld of computer vision, in which sophisticated
com- tational methods for extracting information from visual
imagery have been developed over a number of decades. However,
complete systems incorpor- ing such advanced techniques, while
meeting the requirements of real-time processing and adaptivity to
the complexity that even our everyday envir- ment displays, are
scarce. The present volume takes an important step for ?lling this
gap by presenting methods and a system for visual perception for a
humanoid robot with speci?c applications to manipulation tasks and
to how the robot can learn by imitating the human.
In recent yearswe haveseen considerableadvances in the development
of - manoid robots, that is robots with an anthropomorphic design.
Such robots should be capable of autonomously performing tasks for
their human users in changing environments by adapting to these and
to the circumstances at hand. To do so, they as well as any kind of
autonomous robot need to have some way of understanding the world
around them. We humans do so by our senses, both our far senses
vision and hearing (smelling too) and our near senses touch and
taste. Vision plays a special role in the way it simulta- ously
tells us "where" and "what" in a direct way. It is therefore an
accepted factthatto
developautonomousrobots,humanoidornot,itisessentialto- clude
competent systems for visual perception. Such systems should embody
techniques from the ?eld of computer vision, in which sophisticated
com- tational methods for extracting information from visual
imagery have been developed over a number of decades. However,
complete systems incorpor- ing such advanced techniques, while
meeting the requirements of real-time processing and adaptivity to
the complexity that even our everyday envir- ment displays, are
scarce. The present volume takes an important step for ?lling this
gap by presenting methods and a system for visual perception for a
humanoid robot with speci?c applications to manipulation tasks and
to how the robot can learn by imitating the human.
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