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Welcome to Raymond's Website!

Welcome to Raymond's Website!

Here you'll find information about me, my interests, projects and research. Please have a browse!

Homepage migrated!

My website has been migrated! Now that I've graduated, I figured I should move my website from its former location at the School of Computer Science and Engineering at UNSW to its new home, here at http://RSheh.raybot.com.au/ :-D

Oh ya, I've also started my own business ... my first product is an Android app! It's currently in beta test, it should appear on the Android Marketplace soon. Head on over to http://SortDroid.raybot.com.au and have a peek! :-) 

There might still be the odd thing that points back to UNSW but most of the links should be migrated across now. 


Created: 2011-05-24 12:08 Last modified: 2011-05-24 12:08 (Sydney time) Direct link to this segment
Gee I really haven't updated in a loooong time!
Wow it really has been a long time since I last updated (RoboCup in mid 2009)! Here are some highlights from the last year-and-a-half since my last update ;-)


I've graduated!

On the 14th of December, 2010, I graduated with a PhD!

Raymond and Ayako in graduation outfits at UNSW
Raymond and Ayako in graduation outfits in front of the "Stargate" clock at UNSW.
Ayako graduated from her Bachelor of Music degree in 2009.

I submitted my thesis, entitled "Learning Robot Behaviours by Observing and Envisating", for examination at the beginning of June and received reviewer comments in late November. I was particularly pleased at getting scores of 1, 1 and 2 from the 3 examiners (1 = accepted with optional corrections, 2 = accept with minor corrections). Many thanks to everyone who helped make this possible, especially my supervisors, Claude Sammut and Bernhard Hengst, my parents and sister, my wife Ayako, my friends and colleagues in the 3rd floor lab and the three anonymous reviewers!

You can now download my thesis from the UNSW library at http://handle.unsw.edu.au/1959.4/45703  .

Since then, I've been busy with RoboCup, our honeymoon, writing papers, moving out, driving from Sydney back to Perth, the Magic 2010 Competition and other travelling. I'm now doing some more paper writing, doing all the things I've been putting off for the last 6 years or so and getting ready to start work as a Guest Researcher at the National Institute of Standards and Technology in the US! I'll be working with the Intelligent Systems Division on standard test methods for response robots - very similar to the sorts of things I've done in the past with them and with RoboCup Rescue.

I plan on being there for around 1.5-2 years before coming back to Perth ... so while it's a bit early for me to be looking for a job right now, if you're an innovative research lab in Perth and anticipate being in need of someone with both practical and theoretical robotics R&D skills starting around the end of 2012, please do have a look at my resume and get in touch! ;-D

 

Magic 2010 in Adelaide!

Magic 2010, a military robotics competition, came to Australia in November 2010! I was involved as part of the NIST crew, responsible for the evaluation of maps generated by the various teams. It was an interesting variation on the robotics and competitions that I've been involved in previously.

The NIST crew at Magic 2010, held at Adelaide Showgrounds.
Raymond and the rest of the NIST crew in front of the Secretary's Office at the
Royal Adelaide Showgrounds, where Magic 2010 was held.


We're married!

Ayako and I had our wedding on the 6th of December 2009 (yup I'm really *THAT* behind in my updates)! We were married at the chapel of All Saints' College, where I went to high school, by Reverend Canon Terrence Curtis, the College Chaplain from when I went to school! We also had a Chinese ceremony at home and in April 2010 we had a Japanese ceremony in Ayako's hometown of Yokohama!
Family and friends at Ayako and Raymond's Chinese wedding Family and friends at Ayako and Raymond's Western weddingFamily and friends at Ayako and Raymond's Japanese wedding
Raymond and Ayako with family and friends in attendance at their Chinese, Western and Japanese weddings!


RoboCup 2010 and our Honeymoon

We did have to wait about half a year before we went on honeymoon to Europe ... we figured I was pushing my luck getting married so close to handing in my thesis, the least I could do was hand in before disappearing on a 3 week trip ;-) Of course, the first stop on our honeymoon was RoboCup 2010 in Singapore! :-D

Team CASualty at RoboCup 2010 in Singapore
Team CASualty at RoboCup 2010 in Singapore.
Raymond and Ayako in front of Legoland Germany
Raymond and Ayako in front of Legoland Germany, one of the stops on their European Honeymoon!

As I spent most of the preceeding few months frantically writing up, I wasn't able to do anywhere near as much development as in past years so my main contribution to the team this year was as robot operator. Once again, we won the Best-in-Class Autonomy challenge (although this time I can't claim credit - the code was written by Adam Milstein ;-D ). However, we also won Best-in-Class Mobility, driving our stripped down RoboticFX Negotiator around *almost* 11 laps of the standard NIST advanced mobility test method in just over 10 minutes - after only a 1 lap practice!



Driving across Australia

In September 2010, Ayako and I left Sydney to move back to Perth. Instead of flying like we usually do, we decided to drive. 7 days at around 7-8 hours a day. Quite an experience! 

Our route from Sydney to Perth
The route from Sydney to Perth.
Raymond and Ayako at the Eastern end of the Nullarbor Plain 
Raymond and Ayako at the Eastern end of the Nullarbor Plain.


Created: 2011-02-15 23:18 Last modified: 2011-02-21 16:27 (Sydney time) Direct link to this segment
Videos from RoboCup 2009

Videos taken/compiled by me: 

 

During this year's RoboCup Rescue event, I managed to also take some photos and videos (although nowhere near as many as in past years - for some reason I kept extra busy this year). I know some of you have been waiting for these, here they are! Note that these are low resolution for-web versions. Unless otherwise noted, these videos are all Copyright (c) 2009 Raymond Sheh and published under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike license. Please contact me for high resolution versions. 

Timelapse of arena destruction - Adam Jacoff (the head of RoboCup Rescue) did mention that the best way we could thank Michael Hofbaur (the local chair and the guy who was in charge of building the arena) was to help him tear it down as quickly as possible!

 


A timelapse of arena destruction, played in reverse order is available from here. Looks somewhat more interesting, in a somewhat strange way! I've also got a timelapse of the practice and some of the competition runs for the finals, see here! See if you can find yourself and your robot ... 

 

We've also put together a composite video of best-in-class mobility run (we came equal 1st in the actual run with 8 points and 2nd in overall best-in-class mobility!). Note that we stripped out pretty much all of the sensors and computers from the stock RoboticFX Negotiator robot - to the point that I had to drive it through its original base station with a single forward-facing camera! In-arena video taken by Claude Sammut. This video is Copyright (c) 2009 Team CASualty, All Rights Reserved.


(High res version here)

Videos taken by other members of Team CASualty: 

More videos of our robots in action! These videos are Copyright (C) 2009 Team CASualty, All Rights Reserved. 

More videos and photos to come, watch this space! :-) 


Created: 2009-07-18 17:24 Last modified: 2009-07-22 16:15 (Sydney time) Direct link to this segment
The ABC (Australia) picks up the good news!

OK so I'm a bit late on this one ... my excuse is that I just came off a 12 hour flight from Frankfurt ;-) 

Yesterday, the ABC (Australian Broadcasting Corporation) interviewed me as part of a story on our success at this year's RoboCup! Head on over to the website of the PM Program at http://www.abc.net.au/pm/content/2008/s2618328.htm for the audio and http://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2009/07/06/2618470.htm for the transcript!

You'll need to excuse the "umms" in that interview ... I had only been awake for about 20 minutes when the ABC called! 

 

Whilst we're on media things, UNSW TV (the UNSW YouTube channel) has published a short segment on my work with rescue robots! This was filmed a couple of months ago (hence the reference to the competition "in a couple of months" in the video) ... see here!

 

 


Created: 2009-07-07 23:24 Last modified: 2009-07-08 00:45 (Sydney time) Direct link to this segment
Success in RoboCup Rescue 2009!

Yet another year, yet another RoboCup ... and arguably the second most successful I've been involved with!
(The MOST successful would have to be our first place in what is now the Standard Platform League in 2003 ;-P )

This time, RoboCup was held in the beautiful city of Graz in Austria and once again I was a member of "Team CASualty", an entry in the RoboCup Rescue Robot League. With two robots, we managed to pick up 3 awards!

 


 

Our four-wheeled robot, Emu, came first in the "Best-In-Class Autonomy" category. This was awarded for the robot that was best able to autonomously navigate through various parts of the arena - that is, drive by itself, without a human operator - and to build a map of the area through which it traveled. These areas included areas that had non-flat flooring and areas that were strewn with loose blocks and planks of wood.  

 

 

We also won the "Innovative Operator Interface" award for our ability to use autonomy to assist the operator by allowing one operator to control multiple robots. Through the course of the competition, we were able to gain an advantage by sending one robot ahead in self-driving autonomous mode whilst the operator dealt with another robot.  

 

 

Our second robot, Negotiator, came second in the "Best-In-Class Mobility" category. This was awarded for the robot that was best able to traverse the rough terrain in the arena - both in terms of being able to get to simulated victims and identify their important signs of life as well as in terms of how fast the robot could move through the terrain.

 

 I was the robot operator for the team as well as programmer for the low level robot interface (which allows the computer to actually control the robot's motors) and for autonomy (the logic that tells the robot where to go based on what it sees).

The members of the core development team were:

  • Raymond Sheh (UNSW) - Robot Operator, Software for autonomous behaviour and low level interface (ME! :-D )
  • Dr. Adam Milstein (UNSW) - Software for autonomous mapping and display
  • Matthew McGill (UNSW) - Software engineering, user interfaces and general software infrastructure
  • Rudino Salleh (UNSW) - Hardware

We were also supported by:

  • Dr. Nathan Kirchner (UTS) - Hardware support
  • Reza Farid (UNSW) - General support
  • John Zaitseff (UNSW) - Administration

And of course we were lead by:

  • Prof. Claude Sammut (UNSW)
  • Dr. Bernhard Hengst (UNSW)

A huge thanks to everyone who made this possible and especially to the Australian Research Council Center of Excellence for Autonomous Systems (CAS) who funded this research and the organisers of the competition from the RoboCup Federation , the National Institute of Standards and Technology (USA) and the Technical University of Graz !


Created: 2009-07-07 23:19 Last modified: 2009-07-18 16:32 (Sydney time) Direct link to this segment
"Watch for Robots" - The book!

My first ever book, "Watch for Robots", is now ready for sale! In it, you'll find some of my best photos from the last two years of Rescue Robotics events - from the Response Robot Evaluation Exercse (#3) at the Montgomery County Fire and Rescue training facility in August 2006 through to the 4th Rescue Robotics Camp at the Istituto Superiore Antincendi in Rome in September 2007. You'll also find descriptions of all the 36 robots featured plus the various events.  

"Watch for Robots" is available in both softcover and hardcover. The current list price (before shipping) is $39.95USD for the softcover and $51.95USD for hardcover.

To order your copy, please visit http://WatchForRobots.raybot.net or click the book icon below.

Perfect as a gift for anyone interested in robots, technology and photography! ;-)

A Glimpse at the Early Childhood of Rescue Robotics
By Raymond Sheh


Created: 2008-09-30 09:53 Last modified: 2009-07-18 16:35 (Sydney time) Direct link to this segment
Rescue Robotics Camp 2007!

(Did Google drop you here when you were actually looking for the 2009 Rescue Robotics camp? The 2009 camp is to be held in Thailand, see http://thailandrescuerobot.org/workshop/ for details!)

The Fourth Annual Rescue Robotics Camp, 2007

at Istituto Superiore Antincendi, Rome, Italy

Another October, another Rescue Robotics camp! This year the camp was held almost 4 weeks early to coincide with the IEEE Robotics and Automation Society's International Workshop on Safety, Security and Rescue Robotics, both hosted by Istituto Superiore Antincendi, about 6KM south of Rome. I was fortunate enough to be invited back to help out at the camp, where I was mainly attached to the Flying Robots practical. I also presented our paper on terrain feature extraction to the SSRR workshop. Oh, and I took almost 5,000 photos! :-)

Group Photograph

If you're looking for more photos from the event, have a look at http://rrc07.raybot.net/ !

We had a great showing with practical sessions about robot simulators with NIST, walking robots with the University of Pennsylvania, flying robots with Ascending Technologies, shapechanging advanced mobility robots with Chiba Institute of Technology and Tohoku University and 3D mapping and modelling with the University of Rome "La Sapienza"!

Once again the great organisation effort by the teams from the University of Rome "La Sapienza" under Professor Daniele Nardi, the National Institute for Standards and Technologies under Adam Jacoff and International Rescue System Institute under Professor Satoshi Tadokoro paid off.

As this year's camp was held much earlier than usual, we could not be accommodated at the Institute ... I ended up at the Hotel Pace Elvezia, a short walk from Piazza Venezia in the middle of Rome ... and boy am I glad I ended up there! I got to see a lot more of Rome than I did in the past simply by taking detours to and from the metro station each day ... I should go through the 2,700 photos I took around Rome (not including the 2,000 or so photos I took during the actual events!) soon and put some of them up - in the meantime I've got a few up at my Flickr page! :-)


Created: 2007-10-28 17:05 Last modified: 2009-08-08 10:15 (Sydney time) Direct link to this segment
Response Robot Evaluation Exercise 2007

More robots! After the 2006 Response Robot exercise at the Maryland Task Force 1 training facility, NIST kindly invited me to another exercise, this time at the Texas Engineering Extension Service's Brayton Fire Training Field, for another chance to be on the other side of the fence (usually I'm operating the robot, this time I got to be the evaluator!). Once again I was on the ramp test - where the robots had to drive a fixed pattern on a sloping platform with different types of surfaces and we timed how long it took for each robot. And of course, I got to meet up with a whole pile of old friends (including good ol' Brutus, the search canine, brought to the event by handlers Tom and Lee Haus) and made a pile of new ones! Thanks for the great time!  

I got heaps of photos as well! See http://nistrobots-june07.rsheh.raybot.net/ :-)


Created: 2007-10-14 17:22 Last modified: 2007-10-14 17:34 (Sydney time) Direct link to this segment
RoboCup Trip 07

Wheee! 14 flights, 12 stops, 5 official events, 4 universities, 2 hire cars, 1 really good holiday and many many new friends ... how is this for a trip? Between the 15th of June and the 27th of July I managed to squeeze all of these in:

  1. Fly to College Station, Texas (via Los Angeles and Dallas Fort Worth) for the NIST/DHS Response Robot Evaluation Exercise #4
  2. Fly to Corvallis, Oregon (via Dallas Fort Worth) for the International Conference on Machine Learning at Oregon State University
  3. Drive to Rockaway Beach (booked an "economy car" via Hertz and got a Prius with all the fruit!) for lunch with a good friend
  4. Fly to Atlanta (via Dallas Fort Worth - where we got stuck for 24 hours due to bad weather!) for the Robotics: Science and Systems conference, RoboCup 2007 and the RoboCup Symposium at Georgia Tech
  5. Fly to Tampa, Florida to visit the Center for Robot Assisted Search and Rescue at the University of South Florida - and to meet up with friends!
  6. Drive to Fort Myers to get a jump on the traffic and visit the summer residences of Thomas Edison and Henry Ford (and fix their penny crusher!)
  7. Drive to Key West, Florida, watching the sun set on the way (ya, we mistimed it, we were going to try and get there for the sunset)
  8. Drive to Cape Canaveral to visit the Kennedy Space Center!
  9. Drive to Orlando for DisneyLand and Universal Studios!
  10. Fly to Las Vegas via Dallas Fort Worth to see the Grand Canyon and Cirque du Soleil's production of "O"!
  11. Fly to Los Angeles to see Hollywood!
  12. Fly to San Jose to meet some friends, visit Google, Stanford University, NASA Ames and the Golden Gate Bridge

Let's just say after all that I was pretty exhausted ... but it was great fun! Now to dig up all those photos ... per-event blog entries to come ... maybe ... yes I know, I haven't updated in 8 months or so, this is the backlog ;-)


Created: 2007-10-14 17:21 Last modified: 2007-10-14 17:58 (Sydney time) Direct link to this segment
Migrated to MODx ...Wheee! Looks like the migration from Etomite to MODx has worked ... of course, watch as the whole website comes crashing down around me ... watch, for instance, as a pile of questionmarks-in-diamonds (or blank squares if you're using IE, or your unknown-character-marker in whatever browser you're using) spring up across the site ... *sigh*
Created: 2006-12-27 21:54 Last modified: 2006-12-27 23:33 (Sydney time) Direct link to this segment


Older news
> Merry Christmas! Happy New Year!
> Interesting areas ...
> Rescue Robotics Camp photos up!
> The Third Rescue Robotics Camp, 2006
> My first sight of snowfall!
> Robots Exercise and SSRR'06
> JADE now LGPL
> New website alias
> Photos!
> RoboCup'06 wrapup
> We're at RoboCup 2006!
> Player/Stage camera driver for newer Logitech cameras
> Our robot on TV!
> JADE - The JAva Dynamics Simulator
> Website Online!

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