RoboCup Junior
RoboCup Junior, sometimes stylised RobocupJunior, is a division of RoboCup, a not-for-profit robotics organisation. It focuses on education and aims to introduce the larger goals of the RoboCup project to primary and secondary school aged children. Participants compete in one of three main leagues: Soccer, Rescue or Dance. Dance Theatre also exists as a sub-league of Dance, and Premier Rescue is part of the competition in Australia and New Zealand.
History
RoboCup Jr Soccer was invented and started back in 1998 with a demonstration held by Henrik Hautop Lund and Luigi Pagliarini at the RoboCup international competition held in Paris, France. In 1999, an interactive workshop and competition was held by Henrik Hautop Lund and Luigi Pagliarini at the RoboCup international competition in Stockholm, Sweden. The following year in 2000, the first international RoboCup Junior Educational competition was held in Melbourne, Australia. The format for RoboCup Junior was devised by a Melbourne committee of teachers and industry representatives. The first competition introduced the three level competition of Dance, Sumo and Soccer.Then-prime minister of Australia, John Howard, was impressed in 2001 when he visited students competing in a RoboCup Junior Australia competition, congratulating both teachers and students for their accomplishments.
Queen Elizabeth II was also impressed in 2002 on a trip to Australia, pointing out the complexity of what students were accomplishing.
International competitions
Each year, an international competition is run around the same time, and at the same location, as the RoboCup competition. The location changes each year, and in the past has seen events held at:- 2000 - Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
- 2001 - Seattle, Washington, United States of America
- 2002 - Fukuoka, Japan
- 2003 - Padua, Italy
- 2004 - Lisbon, Portugal
- 2005 - Osaka, Japan
- 2006 - Bremen, Germany
- 2007 - Atlanta, Georgia, United States of America
- 2008 - Suzhou, China.
- 2009 - Graz, Austria.
- 2010 - Singapore.
- 2011 - Istanbul, Turkey.
- 2012 - Mexico City, Mexico.
- 2013 - Eindhoven, the Netherlands.
- 2014 - João Pessoa, Brazil.
- 2015 - Hefei, China
- 2016 - Leipzig, Germany
- 2017 - Nagoya, Japan
- 2018 - Montreal, Canada.
- 2019 - Sydney, Australia.
- 2022 - Bangkok, Thailand.
- 2023 - Bordeaux, France.
- 2024 - Eindhoven, the Netherlands.
Challenges
Soccer challenge
Two teams each place two robots on a playing field. The aim of the game is for each team of robots to play a fully autonomous game of soccer. The robots detect the infrared-emitting ball and use this as well as other specialised sensors, such as sonars, compasses and cameras to locate themselves and the opposition's goal. These robots must each be able to fit into a cylinder which is 220 mm in diameter and height.Originally, the soccer field had a grayscale plastic floor allowing the robots to locate themselves along the field. In 2007, this was replaced with the GENII field which had different shades of green plastic, which allowed light sensors to be used to more accurately determine location. In 2009, the field was replaced with plain green felt. This change was aimed at making the game more realistic by creating greater reliance on the goal location and walls rather than the ground. The change, however, has been controversial with many teams having problems with quality of the felt.
When RoboCup Junior was first formed, almost all teams used Lego Mindstorms construction kits to build their robots. In more recent years, especially at the World Championships, some teams have been using more advanced technology and designs in their robots. Custom printed circuit boards, actuator devices, cameras and advanced micro controllers have become common place at the international competition.