| About the award | |
|---|---|
| Description: | To recognize individuals who by virtue of initiating new areas of research, development or engineering have had a significant impact on development of the robotics and/or automation fields. The award is intended for people who are in the mid or late portions of their careers, i.e., at least 10 years beyond his or her highest earned academic degree. |
| Established: | 1998 |
| Prize: | $2,000 (as of 2008), a plaque and a certificate. Normally the award will be given to an individual. In the unlikely event that the awards committee designates two persons as equally worthy of the award, the award will be split between them. If two awards |
| Funding: | Funded by the IEEE Robotics and Automation Society. |
| Eligibility: | Any person active in the fields of robotics and/or automation, whether or not they are members of the IEEE Robotics and Automation Society, are eligible for the award. Members of the Society who have worked as part of a team will also be eligible provided their contributions can be clearly identified by the Awards Committee. |
| Basis for judging: | |
| Presentation: | Annually, at the International Conference on Robotics and Automation (ICRA), which is normally held in the mid-April to mid-May period. |
| Year | Winner and reason |
|---|---|
| 2008 |
Russell Taylor
» |
| 2008 |
Aristides Requicha
» |
| 2008 |
Georges Giralt
» |
| 2007 |
Steve Jacobsen
In recognition of outstanding contributions to the design and control of leading edge robots and other animate machines |
| 2007 |
Takeo Kanade
» In recognition of outstanding contributions to the fields of computer vision, manipulation, autonomous mobile robots and medical robotics |
| 2006 |
Suguru Arimoto
» For his work on PD and PID control, iterative learning control, and passivity-based control of nonlinear mechanical systems, that represents a source of reference for virtually any scientists dealing |
| 2005 |
Gerhard Hirzinger
» For his pioneering research in mechatronic devices, teleoperation, articulated hands, and lightweight robots, and his leadership in space robotics programs in Europe. |
| 2005 |
Hirochika Inoue
» For his life long commitment to innovation and excellence in robotics research in Japan and in the world. |
| 2004 |
Antal Bejczy
» For seminal technical contributions to robotics and teleoperation, and pioneering research in space robotics and Human-Robot interfaces. |
| 2004 |
Toshio Fukuda
» For pioneer contributions to the development of cellular/distributed robotics systems and micro/nano robotic systems. |
| 2003 |
Georges Giralt
» , For his contributions in Robot Autonomy and Intelligence and for his pioneering robotics research in France |
| 2003 |
Tzyh-Jong Tarn
» For his technical contributions in developing and implementing nonlinear feedback control concepts for robotics and automation |
| 2002 |
George Bekey
» For leadership in the development of biologically inspired robotic systems, including walking machines, multifingered hands, and multiple robot systems |
| 2001 |
J Luh
» For the development of Newton-Euler equations of motion in a recursive consideration in real-time computer control since the computational complexity is linearly proportional to the number of joints o |
| 2001 |
Richard "Lou" Paul
» |
| 2000 |
Bernie Roth
» In recognition of his work in robot kinematics |
| 1999 |
Shigeo Hirose
» For contributions in the theory and practice of mobile robotics |