Results from the Robocademy ITN: Autonomy, Disturbance Rejection and Perception for Advanced Marine Robotics
Matias Valdenegro-Toro, Mariela De Lucas Alvarez, Mariia Dmitrieva,, Bilal Wehbe, Georgios Salavasidis, Shahab Heshmati-Alamdari, Juan F., Fuentes-P\'erez, Veronika Yordanova, Klemen Isteni\v{c}, Thomas Guerneve

TL;DR
This paper summarizes the Robocademy ITN's research on marine robotics, focusing on autonomy, disturbance rejection, and perception, highlighting significant scientific outputs and industry impact.
Contribution
It presents a comprehensive overview of new research developments in marine robotics from 13 fellows, emphasizing advancements in autonomy, disturbance rejection, and perception technologies.
Findings
71 scientific publications produced
High employment rate of fellows in Europe
Key technologies adopted by the marine robotics industry
Abstract
Marine and Underwater resources are important part of the economy of many countries. This requires significant financial resources into their construction and maintentance. Robotics is expected to fill this void, by automating and/or removing humans from hostile environments in order to easily perform maintenance tasks. The Robocademy Marie Sklodowska-Curie Initial Training Network was funded by the European Union's FP7 research program in order to train 13 Fellows into world-leading researchers in Marine and Underwater Robotics. The fellows developed guided research into three areas of key importance: Autonomy, Disturbance Rejection, and Perception. This paper presents a summary of the fellows' research in the three action lines. 71 scientific publications were the primary result of this project, with many other publications currently in the pipeline. Most of the fellows have found…
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Taxonomy
TopicsUnderwater Vehicles and Communication Systems · Target Tracking and Data Fusion in Sensor Networks · Maritime Navigation and Safety
