SSRR 2013 also serves as an entry point for researchers and technologists who want to learn more about safety, security and rescue robotics, through tutorials and keynotes.<br>A Rescue Robotics Camp, attached to the conference, gives participants the opportunity to learn about the state of the art algorithms for Search and Rescue Robots and their use. The camp is organized in collaboration with the NIFTi EU project and RoboCup.<br>Papers and participation fall into:<br>Regular papers (4–6 pages) describing original work in SSR or work that can be applied to SSR domains.<br>Center/project papers (2–4 pages) describing work at centers or active multi–institutional projects.<br>Vision papers (2–4) presenting long–term challenges or new ideas outside of the mainstream in computing for SSR robotics.<br>Late Breaking Reports (1–2 pages) contributing novel directions or work which has not been fully analyzed or explored. Late Breaking Reports are reviewed and the relevance of the material to the SSR domains must be clear.<br>Topics include but are not limited to:<br>Biologically inspired solutions<br>Casualty assessment, care and extraction<br>Chemical, biological, or radiological events<br>Computer vision<br>GPS–denied navigation and mapping<br>Humanoid robots<br>Humanitarian demining<br>Human–robot interaction<br>Inspection of critical infrastructure<br>Manipulation<br>Multi–agent coordination<br>Nuclear decommissioning<br>Sensing and sensor fusion<br>SLAM in extreme environments<br>Structural assessment<br>Telemedicine<br>Unmanned ground, aerial, and marine vehicles<br>Urban search and rescue<br>Wildland fire fighting<br>In addition, SSRR 2013 encourages the submission of "non–traditional" papers which contribute to understanding robot systems for Public Safety and have an explicit link to Public Safety but may not have results in a high fidelity SSRR domain.
Abbrevation
SSRR
City
Linkoeping
Country
Sweden
Deadline Paper
Start Date
End Date
Abstract