DocumentCode :
2701500
Title :
Use of remotely operated marine vehicles at Minamisanriku and Rikuzentakata Japan for disaster recovery
Author :
Murphy, Robin R. ; Dreger, Karen L. ; Newsome, Sean ; Rodocker, Jesse ; Steimle, Eric ; Kimura, Tetsuya ; Makabe, Kenichi ; Matsuno, Fumitoshi ; Tadokoro, Satoshi ; Kon, Kazuyuki
Author_Institution :
Center for Robot-Assisted Search & Rescue, Texas A&M Univ., College Station, TX, USA
fYear :
2011
fDate :
1-5 Nov. 2011
Firstpage :
19
Lastpage :
25
Abstract :
Three underwater remotely operated vehicles (ROVs) were used over a five day period to inspect critical infrastructure and to assist with victim search and recovery at six sites in the Iwate Prefecture following the Tohoku Earthquake and Tsunami. Unmanned marine vehicles have been used since 2004 for disaster recovery operations but in limited applications, in single areas, and in short deployment durations. The joint IRS-CRASAR deployment matched robots for missions specified by civilian municipalities and the Japanese Coast Guard. The ROVs successfully allowed a fishing port to be re-opened and searched for victims trapped underwater in five different locations in varying areas (marinas, bridge debris, and waterfront residential areas) that could not be searched by manual divers. From a scientific perspective, the deployment provides a corpus of 15 hours of data of how rescue robots can be used. It illustrates that rescue robots are i) valuable for both economic and victim recovery, not just response, ii) that disaster robots need to be optimized for the unique missions and stakeholder needs, and iii) that human-robot interaction remains a challenge. This paper also identifies new areas for research: computer vision and cognitive engineering, cyber-physical systems, heterogeneous multi-robot coordination, human-robot interaction, simulation and geographical information systems.
Keywords :
disasters; earthquakes; marine vehicles; mobile robots; remotely operated vehicles; tsunami; IRS-CRASAR deployment matched robots; Japanese coast guard; Tohoku earthquake; civilian municipalities; cognitive engineering; computer vision; cyber-physical systems; disaster recovery operations; fishing port; geographical information systems; heterogeneous multirobot coordination; human-robot interaction; remotely operated marine vehicles; tsunami; underwater remotely operated vehicles; unmanned marine vehicles; victim search; Bridges; Hurricanes; Marine vehicles; Robot kinematics; Sonar; Vehicles;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Safety, Security, and Rescue Robotics (SSRR), 2011 IEEE International Symposium on
Conference_Location :
Kyoto
Print_ISBN :
978-1-61284-770-2
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/SSRR.2011.6106798
Filename :
6106798
Link To Document :
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