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MMVLWiki
The Mobile Machines and Vision Laboratory (MMVL) is a research group under the Centre for Automation and Robotics Research (CARR) within the Materials and Engineering Research Institute (MERI). The expertise within the MMVL group are diverse but it includes a long standing presence on open-source Computer Vision / Machine Perception, as well as Embedded Systems Engineering and Human Machine interfaces, in relation to mobile robotics research and its applications.
The main theme of our research is on the connection of artificial perception and physical action. Perception requires extensive processing and interpreting of data generated by sensors. We employ a wide range of perception sensor modalities and sensing technologies, including various types of cameras, ranging lasers and ultrasound devices. Actions are typically performed by robots and multi robot teams, ranging from large to medium and small sized mobile robots. The robots and sensors are to be applied in structured environments and human machine interactions play an important role.
Past Projects | Present Projects | ||
---|---|---|---|
MINIMAN | MiCRoN | VIEW-FINDER | REPLICATOR |
I-SWARM | Nanorobotics | GUARDIANS | DHRS CIM |
The MMVL has had a long presence in delivering UK Research Councils and European Union projects since 1997; such as, Miniman, Micron, I-SWARM, GUARDIANS, VIEW-FINDER and Nanorobotics (also see past projects). Currently the MMVL is participating in EU-FP7 projects REPLICATOR and DHRS-CIM (also see present projects). Furthermore we are relatively active in the area of Medical Electronics Engineering Research. The MMVL is also actively involved in consultancy for industry.
HornetsEye (Ruby) | Mimas (C++) |
Medical Image Processing | Robot Automation |
If you would like to have our consultancy, please contact Sheaf Solutions Consultancy.
If you are a student interested in doing a project, please check out our project suggestions. Of course we are also open to new ideas.
If you need assistance, please visit the help section.
http://vision.eng.shu.ac.uk/mmvlwiki/ is the short URL for this web page.
News
Thesis on 3-D surface reconstruction
7th Apr 2010 Kim Chuan has published his PhD thesis on Development of 3-D Surface Data Acquisition System Using Non-Calibrated Laser Alignment Techniques. More...
View Finder project successful completion
22nd Jan 2010 The ViewFinder EU-FP6 project was successfully completed. The EU review panel congratulated the project partners for the integration efforts and the presented overall solution.
Robotic centre launch event
22nd January 2010: The Centre for Automation and Robotics Research (CARR) will be opened by Professor Noel Sharkey from Sheffield University. The launch will include demonstrations of the GUARDIANS- and VIEW-FINDER-project. Jacques Penders was interviewed on BBC radio (at 22m 07s of the 30 mins show).
RISE 2010 conference
20th-21th January 2010: The 2010 conference on Risky Intervention and Surveillance /Maintenance of the Environment (RISE) is taking place at Sheffield Hallam University (Owen 1028). More...
Rubyconf 2009 presentation video
20th January 2010: Confreaks made a video of the Rubyconf 2009 presentation about HornetsEye. More...
Robobuilder programming
4th October 2009: A new fun project is about writing a Ruby-extension to control a Robobuilder Huno. The aim is to prototype robotic applications involving machine vision. More...
HornetsEye-0.32 released
8th August 2009: A new version of the HornetsEye computer vision library was released. The core of the library was rewritten and it features a much more versatile type system, extended element selectors, array views, and tensor operations. Maps, warps, and masks now work on single elements as well as sub-arrays. A conversion to OpenCV::CvMat and back was implemented. Furthermore a GNUplot example was added. More...
Closed-loop control in a TEM
26th June 2009: A software demonstrating vision-based closed-loop control in a TEM was tested today. In the end we succeeded to demonstrate vision-based closed-loop control. More...
Telemanipulation proof-of-concept
30th April 2009: A prototype software for telemanipulation in a TEM was tested successfully. More...
Older News
Older news can be found in the news archive.