InTech Authors Awarded with IEEE Awards

The year 2010 is a very special year of development for InTech. The number of publications has grown significantly, the number of downloads has reached one million, and InTech is also proud to present three distinguished authors, each of whom has been awarded with a Robotics and Automation Society (RAS) award this year, and has previously published at least once with InTech.

Toshio Fukuda

Dr Fukuda, who studied both at Tokyo University and at Yale is a professor at Nagoya University in Japan. He has served as vice president, committee member and chairman of the committee of the IEEE Industrial Electronics Society and many other scientific organizations. A long and impressive list of his engagements can be checked on his personal webpage.

In 2010 he received an IEEE Robotics and Automation Technical Field Award (TFA) and was awarded a bronze medal and an honorarium of 10,000 dollars for leadership and pioneering contributions to Intelligent Robotic Systems and Micro and Nano Robotic Systems.

Six times author with InTech, his publications are listed below.

Hauke Strasdat

Hauke Strasdat is a PhD student at the Department of Computing at University College, London and a member of the Robot Vison Lab. For a young author he is proving to be quite prolific with interests in robotics, computer vision, optimisation, and machine learning. He mostly works on his publications with his supervisor Dr Andrew J. Davison. More information can be obtained here.

He was awarded the ICRA Best Vision Paper at the International Conference on Robotics and Automation with a 1,000 dollars prize.

His InTech publication is in the field of Humanoid Robots:

Timothy Barfoot

Dr Timothy Barfoot leads a research program with the purpose of enabling scientific exploration by creating advanced autonomy for space robotics. He is currently especially interested in planetary rovers and planetary exploration in general.

As he reports on his webpage recent projects include global localization using lidar, visual teach and repeat using a stereo camera, visual odometry, celestial navigation and path planning with variable-fidelity terrain assessment. More information can be obtained here.

Another conference award winner, he received the KUKA Service Robotics Best Paper Award with an honorarium of 1,000 dollars. The award is sponsored by KUKA Roboter GmbH for an initial period of 5 years (2008-2012) which is likely to be extended.

His InTech publication is relevant in the field of Multirobot Systems:

InTech Reaches One Million Downloads

Following the dramatic growth of Open Access publishing, which documented in March 2010 the annual growth of 22%, InTech has now reached a number of 1 million downloads of both book chapters and peer-reviewed journal articles.

According to Heather Morrison “about 20% of the world’s peer-reviewed journals are now open access.”

Open Access demonstrated significant impact on scientific literature, and as is the case of any disruptive innovation, adoption begins very slowly at first, then it builds quickly and finally overwhelms old models. According to Bernard Lunn in 3 to 10 years, printed journals will move to a “print on demand” model.

InTech had only 1 journal published in 2005, and today it counts over 200 books, more than 5000 articles including our leading publication International Journal of Advanced Robotic Systems, and at least 10000 users.

Not stopping at journals, InTech publishes books covering fields in Science, Technology and Medicine searchable by more specific subjects. The future plans include adding more members to our editorial board and including topics in even wider scope of scientific knowledge not ever losing from sight our core mission – to utilize the disruptive potential of Open Access to broaden access to knowledge.