
Stanford’s “autonomous” helicopters teach themselves to fly
Stanford computer scientists have developed an artificial intelligence system that enables robotic helicopters to teach themselves to fly difficult stunts by watching other helicopters perform the same maneuvers.
…
The dazzling airshow is an important demonstration of “apprenticeship learning,” in which robots learn by observing an expert, rather than by having software engineers peck away at their keyboards in an attempt to write instructions from scratch.
…
It might seem that an autonomous helicopter could fly stunts by simply replaying the exact finger movements of an expert pilot using the joy sticks on the helicopter’s remote controller. That approach, however, is doomed to failure because of uncontrollable variables such as gusting winds.
…
The dazzling airshow is an important demonstration of “apprenticeship learning,” in which robots learn by observing an expert, rather than by having software engineers peck away at their keyboards in an attempt to write instructions from scratch.
…
It might seem that an autonomous helicopter could fly stunts by simply replaying the exact finger movements of an expert pilot using the joy sticks on the helicopter’s remote controller. That approach, however, is doomed to failure because of uncontrollable variables such as gusting winds.
Very cool. Related: MIT’s Autonomous Cooperating Flying Vehicles – The sub-$1,000 UAV Project – 6 Inch Bat Plane – Kayak Robots

Simply amazing! With this type of learning, robots could do virtually anything, just by watching it be done. That’s incredible!
Occasionally I look here by and read the interesting and well written contributions. Today I would like to leave gladly a greeting from Thuringia in Germany!
It was predictable! Smart people do everything that robots look and do like them exactly. But they don’t even guess what that all brings to them 😉 But anyway it is a one more step forward in the engineering.
Pingback: CuriousCat: Robot Independently Applies the Scientific Method
Those have to be some the the coolest mini-helecopters I have ever seen. I’d love to see them in action.
The thing that I noticed was that they are all different sized. That being the case, I wonder how they can “learn” to do tricks. Can they account for the variation in size? I guess that must be the answer.
Pingback: Curious Cat Science and Engineering Blog » Learning Design of Experiments with Paper Helicopters
Pingback: Swarmanoid: Cooperative Robot Networks » Curious Cat Science and Engineering Blog