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                                   FROM RoboCup TO RoboCity CoRE

                                                  Minoru Asada

                                       Graduate  School of Eng. Osaka  University,
                                           Suita, Osaka 565-0871, JAPAN




                  ABSTRACT
                  This article presents the brief introduction  of Robot  World Cup Competition  and Conference,  in short,
                  RoboCup. The aims and  the current activities  are introduced. Next, RoboCity  CoRE,  an  inner city RT
                  base, is introduced  as a RT experiment field open to public.

                  KEYWORDS

                  RoboCup,  RoboCupSoccer,  RoboCupRescue,  RoboCupJunior,  RoboCity  CoRE,  Open  Lab.,
                  Studio,Safety  Verification  Field.


                  INTRODUCTION

                  RoboCup is an attempt to foster  intelligent robotics research by providing a standard problem  of which
                  the  ultimate  goal  is  to  build  a  team  of  eleven  humanoid  robots  that  can  beat  the  human  world  cup
                  champion  soccer  team  by 2050. It's  obvious that  building  a robot to play  soccer  game  is  an  immense
                  challenge; readers might therefore  wonder why  even  bother to propose RoboCup. It  is our intention  to
                  use RoboCup  as  a vehicle  to  promote  robotics  and  AI research,  by  offering  a publicly  appealing  but
                  formidable  challenge  [1,2].

                  A  unique  feature  of  RoboCup  is  that  it  is  a  systematic  attempt  to  promote  research  using  common
                  domain, mainly  soccer. Also,  it is  perhaps the first to  explicitly  claim that the  ultimate goal  is to beat
                  human  world  cup  champion  team.  One  of  the  effective  ways  to  promote  engineering  research,  part
                  from  specific  application  developments,  is  to  set  a  significant  long  term  goal.  When  the
                  accomplishment  of  such  a  goal  has  significant  social  impact,  we  call  this  kind  of  goal  a  grand
                  challenge project.  Building  a robot to play  soccer  is not  such a project.  But  its accomplishment  would
                  certainly  considered  as a major  achievement  in the field of robotics, and numerous technology  spin-off
                  can be  expected  during the course of the  project.  We call this kind  of project  a landmark project,  and
                  RoboCup is definitely  a project  of this kind.

                  Since the first RoboCup  in  1997  [3], it has grown  into an international joint-research project  in which
                  about 4000 researchers  from  40 nations around  world  participate  (see Figure  1), and  it  is one the most
                  ambitious  landmark  projects  of  the  21st  century.  RoboCup  currently  consists  of  three  divisions:
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