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Teams tested their skills in the first phase of the ‘SAPIENCE’ international drone competition, funded by the NATO Science for Peace and Security Programme.

By Dr Shamim Quadir (Senior Communications Officer), Published

On Thursday 29 August and Friday 30 August, City St George’s, University of London played host to four international robotics teams competing head-to-head to perform cutting-edge, autonomous search and rescue tasks at the University’s Autonomous Systems Arena.

The competition is one of the first-of-its-kind of fully autonomously controlled drones without human interaction.

Watch the highlight reel from the NATO SAPIENCE competition.

Part of the €1.2m SAPIENCE programme, the competition was the first in a series of collaborative competitions aimed at fostering innovation in search and rescue operations, with the goal of enabling multiple drones to effectively navigate and map global positioning system (GPS)-denied environments, detect and deliver aid to people in disaster areas, and perform complex cooperative tasks.

Delft University of Technology take off at the Autonomous System's Arena

SAPIENCE is funded through the Science for Peace and Security (SPS) Programme of the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation (NATO), and involves competition among teams of MSc and PhD students from four collaborating institutions: City St George’s, University of London (UK) led by Professor Nabil Aouf; University of Alabama, Huntsville (USA) led by Dr Bryan Mesmer; Delft University of Technology (Netherlands) led by Dr Ewoud Smeur and the University of Klagenfurt (Austria) led by Professor Stefan Weiss.

In consultation with the SPS Programme, the expert academic members of the collaborating institutions devised the SAPIENCE project which was approved by NATO Allies.

Watch Claudio Palestini, Head of the NATO Science for Peace and Security Programme, describe what the SAPIENCE project is and its importance:

The first competition simulated an indoor environment which took the form of a ‘rescue room’ in a disaster-stricken building.  A second, upcoming competition will take place in an outdoor disaster environment, and a third will comprise of a mixture of an indoor and outdoor environment to test the robustness of teams’ solutions in varied settings.

From left to right: Ettori Marchesoni (NATO), Helen Reynolds (City, St George's), Prof. Alfredo Pinelli (City St Georges), Nabil Aouf (City St. Georges), The Lord Mayor Alderman Prof. Michael Mainelli (City St Georges), Prof. Raj Roy (City St Georges), Claudio Palestini (NATO), Kanan Barot (City St Georges), Nourhan Ibrahim (NATO)

Last week’s competition tasks required drones to rely on onboard sensors and advanced navigation algorithms to manoeuvre through unknown, confined spaces and create detailed maps of the rescue room area. Additionally, drones had to identify people in need (simulated with mannequins), detect hazards and obstacles, and deliver aid to those requiring assistance. This competition tested the drones' ability to operate effectively in close quarters and under challenging conditions.

The Lord Mayor Alderman Prof. Michael Mainelli and others watching the competition from the viewing gallery

Each participating team consisted of one professor, one academic supervisor and six students. They had the option of using up to two of their own customised, co-operative drones, with the options of introducing artificial intelligence (AI) to their team’s dedicated software to autonomously control them.  Each drone could be equipped with the options of LIDAR (laser imaging, detection, and ranging) and depth-sensing cameras to help it navigate.

All competition participants, judges and academics at the final awarding ceremony

The rules included tasks being time-bound, and penalties for drones moving outside of the constraints of the working envelopes defined for the tasks.

The overall winners of this phase of the competition were the City St George’s team, who were congratulated by the judges for their wide implementation of AI in their approach toward the competition tasks.

In attendance at the event, Claudio Palestini said:

This activity perfectly captures the spirit of the SPS Programme, bringing together teams of young researchers from NATO and Partner countries to advance technological solutions to tackle modern challenges, such as autonomy, artificial intelligence, human-machine teaming, and more.

Also in attendance, The Lord Mayor, Alderman Professor Michael Mainelli, Rector of City St George’s, University of London, said:

Twelve years ago, when Nicky Gavron was at the Greater London Authority (GLA), she and I put forward the importance of drones in reshaping our urban environment. If you can count on drones as a utility, many of the things we do could be done quite differently, but we have not quite reached that stage…..I am very much looking forward to learning about all the projects and opportunities that are here today; doing so by making connections, in the hope that those connections help City St George’s and help my city also.

Nabil Aouf, lead on the SAPIENCE Project at City St George’s, University of London, and Professor of Robotics, Autonomous Systems, and Machines at the School of Science & Technology at the University, reminded the audience:

I want to emphasise that in the drone competitions that we are conducting through this programme, there is no tele-operation at all. It’s all fully autonomous, which is actually very risky, and challenging. So please do bear with us if there are some crashes going on, with us then getting things back together. Even the [United States’ government’s] DARPA, and other competitions, are still tele-operated in many cases. So this is one of the first to go completely autonomous, without assistance, for search and rescue operations.

Professor Raj Roy, Executive Dean of the School of Science & Technology, City St George’s, University of London, shared:

At the School of Science & Technology we have technologies for the future, but also those that are helping with the ethical use of machines, technologies and processes, which is very important to us, and an example of which you see here today. I am delighted with the SAPIENCE project.

On 1 August 2024, City, University of London and St George’s, University of London merged to become City St George’s, University of London. Read more about the merger agreement.

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