Shakey the Robot
Shakey was the
first mobile robot to
reason about its actions. Developed by SRI's Artificial Intelligence
Center from 1966 through 1972 (we were called the Stanford Research Institute at that time), Shakey has had a substantial legacy and influence on
present-day artificial intelligence and robotics.
Shakey had a TV camera, a triangulating range finder, and bump
sensors, and was connected to DEC PDP-10 and PDP-15 computers via radio
and video links. Shakey used programs for perception, world-modeling,
and acting. Low-level action routines took care of simple moving, turning,
and route planning. Intermediate level actions strung the low level ones
together in ways that robustly accomplished more complex tasks. The highest
level programs could make and execute plans to achieve goals given it
by a user. The system also generalized and saved these plans for possible
future use.
Shakey currently resides in the Computer
History Museum in Mountain View, CA.
In 2004, Shakey was selected for induction to the Robot
Hall of Fame at Carnegie Mellon University. Read the SRI
press release for more information.
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