IG
Very fun with plenty of hands-on labs! Really feels like a real and lively robotics course.
This course, which is the last and final course in the Introduction to Robotics with Webots specialization, will teach you basic approaches for planning robot trajectories and sequence their task execution. In "Robotic Path Planning and Task Execution", you will develop standard algorithms such as Breadth-First Search, Dijkstra's, A* and Rapidly Exploring Random Trees through guided exercises. You will implement Behavior Trees for task sequencing and experiment with a mobile manipulation robot "Tiago Steel".
It is recommended that you complete the first and second courses of this specialization, “Introduction to Robotics: Basic Behaviors” and "Robotic Mapping and Trajectory Generation" , before beginning this one. This course can be taken for academic credit as part of CU Boulder’s MS in Computer Science degrees offered on the Coursera platform. These fully accredited graduate degrees offer targeted courses, short 8-week sessions, and pay-as-you-go tuition. Admission is based on performance in three preliminary courses, not academic history. CU degrees on Coursera are ideal for recent graduates or working professionals. Learn more: MS in Computer Science: https://coursera.org/degrees/ms-computer-science-boulder
IG
Very fun with plenty of hands-on labs! Really feels like a real and lively robotics course.
Showing: 5 of 5
Definitely one of my favorite courses/specializations I've taken in MS-CS. Lectures were organized and relevant, and module assignments were challenging enough to be fun, but pretty much never outside of the scope of what was covered in the previous lectures. Expect this course to take a little longer than the previous 2 in the specialization, mainly because of the final project, which does take some thinking and time.
Very fun with plenty of hands-on labs! Really feels like a real and lively robotics course.
A really good introduction into advanced robotics. Thanks so much.
really nice introduction to robots behaviour
Worth to challenge