Course syllabus
Note: The Canvas Discussion pages will be used extensively to give guidance and hints for the home assignments and the project work, as well as for Peer-assisted learning (PAL). Please log in to Canvas several times per week to keep you updated on the discussions, and try your best to take part!
Course-PM
TME290 Autonomous robots - lp4 (7.5 hp)
The course is offered by the department of Mechanics and Maritime Sciences.
Contact details
Please contact the course staff for any further questions about the teaching or course subjects. If a meeting is required, please make contact by email to request an appointment (during office hours).
Examiner and lecturer
Ola Benderius, 031-772 2086, ola.benderius@chalmers.se
Course assistants
Krister Blanch, krister.blanch@chalmers.se (home assignments)
Liv Johansson, liv.johansson@chalmers.se (lab assistant)
Linda Gao, linda.gao@chalmers.se (lab assistant)
Nellie Bergvall, nellie.bergvall@chalmers.se (lab assistant)
Study administrator
Per Thorén, thoren@chalmers.se
Course purpose
The course aims at giving the students an understanding of design principles for autonomous systems, both robots and software agents, and also gives students the opportunity to apply their knowledge in practice through the construction of an industry-relevant autonomous robot.
Schedule
Course literature
Lecture notes, video lectures, source code templates, and web links. The material will be made available via the course web page.
Course design
The course consist of lectures, home assignments, and a project. In the lectures the main theories of autonomous robots are covered, which will provide the students with a broad overview of the subject area. Furthermore, the students are expected to apply the knowledge from the lectures in the project and in the home assignments.
The project part of the course consist of lab sessions with supervision by teachers, targeting a final robot demonstration as a goal, including several sub-goals. The students are expected to carry out some project work outside class hours. The projects should be carried out in teams of 3–4 students per group.
Moreover, there are mandatory home assignments that has to be carried out individually by each student. Both the project part and the individual homework part contribute to the student’s final grade on the course. Please read further details regarding assessment and grading below.
Lab sessions will partly take place at the students' own booked study rooms and in the Robotics lab located in the Mechanical Engineering building. Time slots for the lab are bookable online.
Learning objectives and syllabus
- Describe properties of common types of robotic hardware, including sensors, actuators, and computational nodes
- Apply modern software development and deployment strategies connected with autonomous robots
- Set up and use equations of motion of wheeled autonomous robots
- Apply basic sensor fusion
- Set up and use computer simulations of autonomous robots
- Apply global and local navigation of autonomous robots
- Apply the basics of behavior-based robotics and evolutionary robotics
- Apply methods for decision making in autonomous robots
- Discuss the potential role of autonomous robots in society, including social, ethical, and legal aspects
- Discuss technical challenges with autonomous robots in society
Link to the syllabus on Studieportalen.
Examination form
The examination consists of graded individual homework assignments and a graded project. Both the results on the individual homework part as well as the project group work results contribute to the student’s final grade on the course. There is also a final individual assessment meeting in the end of the course, see below.
See the following subsections for details regarding assessment and grading. Refer also to the below section regarding plagiarism.
Grades
The grades that are given in this course are the following: 5, 4, 3, U (not passed).
Homework assessment
The homework consists of mandatory assignments. Each assignment will be graded and given the grade 3, 4, or 5. A minimum grade of 3 is required on each home assignment in order to pass the course. Re-submissions of assignments will be allowed, but then only to reach the lowest grade. Refer to the home assignment descriptions for details regarding their individual grading.
Project assessment
The project work grade depends on the total accomplishment of the project, and a final report that well describes the solutions is required. For the grade of 4 or 5 an oral presentation is required, and will be scheduled on the students' request after the submission of the report. In addition, the project teams must demonstrate their progress during the course by the accomplishment of some sub-goals.
The students’ performance on the project will be evaluated and graded both on the group level and on the individual level in addition to the project assessment. It's up to each group member to individually plan and carry out the work to reach a specific goal, and if the goal differs from the rest of the group the examiner should be consulted for an individual project plan.
Note: Students of the same project group might end up with different project grades, both depending on individual goals (i.e. if attending the meeting for grade 4 or 5) and the assessment of the work.
Individual team member assessment
Each team member will during the course individually assess fellow team members’ contributions in the project using a specific form, i.e. the Individual Team Member Assessment sheet. The form will be sent out after the project report was submitted. Each student shall then submit the form, via email to the examiner, before receiving a grade on the project. Your answers will not be shared with anyone else! However, it is a delicate matter to do such judgements about other individuals, so please take on this responsibility with honesty and care.
Final course grade
The student’s final course grade will be determined according to the following principles: The mean value of the home assignment grades (3, 4, or 5), plus the grade on the project work (3, 4, or 5), divided by two. The resulting value, rounded to the nearest integer value, is the final individual grade of the course.
In ambiguous cases, such as e.g. when the summation equals 4.5, the student’s overall performance in the course will also be taken into account. For example, it is more likely that the final grade will be a 5, in the above mentioned case, if the student has scored high in the individual tasks and the group grade was low, than in case of the opposite. In that latter case a final grade of 4 is more likely to occur.
Final individual evaluation
In the end of the course, an individual assessment meeting will be held with each student, where the examiner will ask detailed questions about the submitted home assignments and project work. If the student fails to give sufficient answers to these questions the grade might be lowered or blocked for further assessment. The questions will only assess the already approved work, and solely work as a final check for the grading. Therefore, the student should review all submitted content before the meeting, but is not expected to give further information than what was given in the submissions. Typically, this meeting will take place in the exam week based on the student's availability.
Course closure
The course will be open throughout September, and re-submissions given within this time frame will be graded. If all assignments are approved, the final individual evaluation will be offered. If all submission are not completed within the given time frame, then any missing submissions needs to be given the following year (the examiner is free to define an individual plan for completion, based on the current progress and learning outcomes).
Regarding plagiarism
Briefly, plagiarism occurs when someone present ideas, concepts, texts, or other structures from someone else, as their own. I.e. without appropriately acknowledging the original source. See further in the document about Academic integrity and honesty at Chalmers (link).
The reports (and other submitted materials such as e.g. programming code) should be original work in order to be passed. Therefore, all reports and texts that you submit for grading and examination will be checked with Ouriginal, a tool to detect plagiarism.
Note: All suspected cases of plagiarism (not only those detected by Ouriginal) will be reported to the university disciplinary committee (disciplinnämnden)!
Course summary:
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