SecurityWorldMarket

14/03/2017

Intelligent Robot innovated for Security Guardian and Patrol

Taipei, Taiwan

Innovative team of NTUST announces their latest innovation of Intelligent Security Robot, featuring rich functions for security guardian and patrolling purpose.

The Intelligent Security Robot has been developed by a team of professor Ricky Lee of NTUST (National Taiwan University of Science and Technology) that recently announced with the functions of Distance-sensing, Human Recognition, Attacking Action, Tracing, Obstacle Detection, and Patrol Pattern.

With the Distance-sensing, the robot can sense movements in between of  a target and itself to take action or remain the distance. As employing advanced IVA technology, it can recognize the poses or gestures from a human to accept and perform the given instructions. And, the robot supports to aim at a confined target and emit (once or continuously) toward to it as an attack.

The 'Tracing' function of the Robot is designed to keep a certain distance and follow its host or a defined object. It features Obstacle Detection to sense any objects on the way to decide how to avoid and move forward. As with Patrol Pattern, the robot can be pre-programmed the duty routes (patterns) to perform patrols accordingly the schedule-settings.

The innovation is at raw model stage and welcome any types of cooperation for commercialization.

About NTUST

Facing fierce international challenges and competition worldwide, NTUST is ranked as first 42 position among all Universities in the world and the 2nd place in Taiwan. The vocational education of NTUST is responsible for nurturing a skilled workforce, raising the standards of research and development in the industry and increasing the competitiveness of vocational education itself.

 The Regional Industry-University Cooperation Center, In charged by NTUST, has its missions of assisting the MOE in implementing “the Second Phase of the Vocational Education Reform Plan”, promoting the collaboration between regional industries and the schools, helping our twenty-one institutes in partnership turn their research and development into practical industrial applications and the students’ award-winning designs into commercial products.



Product Suppliers
Back to top