AI system beats trio of human champions at drone racing

30 August 2023, 19:14

AI drone racing
AI drone. Picture: PA

The AI system called Swift won multiple races against three champions in first-person view drone racing.

An AI drone has beaten three champion drone racers, setting a “new milestone” as the first autonomous system capable of winning against human champions at a physical sport, researchers said.

An AI system called Swift won multiple races against the trio in first-person view drone racing, where pilots fly quadcopters remotely at speeds of more than 100 kilometres per hour, according to researchers from the University of Zurich and tech company Intel.

Swift is the latest addition to artificial intelligence’s triumphs in competitions against humans, following the successes of IBM’s Deep Blue against Garry Kasparov at chess in 1996 and Google’s AlphaGo against top champion Lee Sedol at Go in 2016.

It took on 2019 Drone Racing League champion Alex Vanover, 2019 MultiGP Drone Racing champion Thomas Bitmatta and three-time Swiss champion Marvin Schaepper.

The races were held between June 5 and 13 last year on a purpose-built track, which necessitated “challenging manoeuvres” in a hangar of Dubendorf Airport, near Zurich.

The AI-powered drone achieved the fastest lap overall but human pilots were “more adaptable”, with the autonomous drone failing when conditions differed to what it was trained for.

Davide Scaramuzza, head of the Robotics and Perception Group at the Swiss university, said that flying drones faster increases their “utility”, as they have a limited battery capacity, and because flying fast is important to cover large spaces in shorter bouts of time.

He added the speed could prove useful for rescue drones entering buildings on fire, and for space exploration, forest monitoring and shooting action scenes on film sets.

Swift reacts in “real time” to data collected by a camera onboard the drone, according to the research, and it was trained in a simulated environment where it taught itself to fly by “trial and error”.

Prof Scaramuzza said: “Physical sports are more challenging for AI because they are less predictable than board or video games.

“We don’t have a perfect knowledge of the drone and environment models, so the AI needs to learn them by interacting with the physical world.”

The research was published in the Nature journal on Wednesday and is titled: Champion-Level Drone Racing using Deep Reinforcement Learning.

By Press Association

More Technology News

See more More Technology News

Openreach van

Upgrade to Openreach ultrafast full fibre broadband ‘could deliver £66bn boost’

Laptop with a virus warning on the screen

Nato countries are in a ‘hidden cyber war’ with Russia, says Liz Kendall

Pat McFadden

Russia prepared to launch cyber attacks on UK, minister to warn

A person holds an iphone showing the app for Google chrome search engine

Apple and Google ‘should face investigation over mobile browser duopoly’

A Google icon on a smartphone

Firms can use AI to help offset Budget tax hikes, says Google UK boss

Icons of social media apps, including Facebook, Instagram, YouTube and WhatsApp, are displayed on a mobile phone screen

Growing social media app vows to shake up ‘toxic’ status quo

Will Guyatt questions who is responsible for the safety of children online

Are Zuckerberg and Musk responsible for looking after my kids online?

Social media apps on a phone

U16s social media ban punishes children for tech firm failures, charities say

Google shown on a smartphone

US Government proposes forcing Google to sell Chrome to break-up tech empire

The logo for Google's Gemini AI assistant

Google’s Gemini AI gets dedicated iPhone app in the UK for the first time

Facebook stock

EU fines Meta £660m for competition rule breaches over Facebook Marketplace

A phone taking a photo of a phone mast

Government pledges more digital inclusion as rural Wales gets phone mast boost

Social media apps displayed on a mobile phone screen

What is Bluesky and why are people leaving X to sign up?

Someone types at a keyboard

Cyber security chief warns Black Friday shoppers to be alert to scams

MPs

Ministers pressed on excluding Chinese firms from UK’s genomics sector

Child with mobile phone stock

Specially designed smartphone for children launches in the UK