TY - GEN
T1 - EuRobotics - Shaping the future of European robotics
AU - Bischoff, Rainer
AU - Guhl, Tim
AU - Wendel, Anne
AU - Khatami, Fariba
AU - Bruyninckx, Herman
AU - Siciliano, Bruno
AU - Pegman, Geoff
AU - Hägele, Martin
AU - Prassler, Erwin
AU - Zimmermann, Thilo
AU - Ibarbia, Jon Agirre
AU - Leroux, Christophe
AU - Tranchero, Bruno
AU - Labruto, Roberto
AU - Knoll, Alois
AU - Lafrenz, Reinhard
PY - 2010
Y1 - 2010
N2 - Over the last few years successful coordination activities have been undertaken within the academic and industrial robotics communities (EURON and EUROP), but both communities still struggle to overcome the community-internal problems regarding terminology and suboptimally coordinated transfer of research visions, technology, and people. The European Robotics Coordination Action euRobotics, which started on 1 January 2010 and runs for three years, aims at creating sustainable solutions to all of the above-mentioned problems. It will continue to implement a policy of targeted stimulation of relevant grass-roots initiatives that both communities have already experimented with in recent ears, but that have previously seen little success because of a lack of committed, professional and coordinated support. Two main objectives will be targeted: (1) the improvement of cooperation between industry and academia and (2) the enhancement of public perception of (European) robotics. It is hoped by the project partners that the planned activities, described in this paper in detail, will result in significant and prevailing advantages for robotics in Europe.
AB - Over the last few years successful coordination activities have been undertaken within the academic and industrial robotics communities (EURON and EUROP), but both communities still struggle to overcome the community-internal problems regarding terminology and suboptimally coordinated transfer of research visions, technology, and people. The European Robotics Coordination Action euRobotics, which started on 1 January 2010 and runs for three years, aims at creating sustainable solutions to all of the above-mentioned problems. It will continue to implement a policy of targeted stimulation of relevant grass-roots initiatives that both communities have already experimented with in recent ears, but that have previously seen little success because of a lack of committed, professional and coordinated support. Two main objectives will be targeted: (1) the improvement of cooperation between industry and academia and (2) the enhancement of public perception of (European) robotics. It is hoped by the project partners that the planned activities, described in this paper in detail, will result in significant and prevailing advantages for robotics in Europe.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=79959518628&partnerID=8YFLogxK
M3 - Conference contribution
AN - SCOPUS:79959518628
SN - 9781617387197
T3 - Joint 41st International Symposium on Robotics and 6th German Conference on Robotics 2010, ISR/ROBOTIK 2010
SP - 728
EP - 735
BT - Joint 41st International Symposium on Robotics and 6th German Conference on Robotics 2010, ISR/ROBOTIK 2010
T2 - Joint 41st International Symposium on Robotics, ISR 2010 and 6th German Conference on Robotics 2010, ROBOTIK 2010
Y2 - 7 June 2010 through 9 June 2010
ER -