Group Predicts Robots Will Win Soccer's World Cup in 2050

Robots in the RoboCup competition aren't quite ready to compete against humans. But a group of scientists predicts that by 2050 they'll build a team of fully autonomous humanoid robot soccer players that will do just that, and win the real World Cup.
(Image credit: Aler et al / SINC)

Anyone who has ever bravely volunteered to coach a youth soccer team is familiar with the blank stares that ensue when trying to explain the offsides rule. The logic that combines moving players, the position of the ball and the timing of a pass is always a challenge for 10-year-old brains to grasp (let alone 40-year-old brains.) Imagine trying to teach this rule to an inanimate, soccer-playing robot, along with all of the other rules, movements and strategies of the game.

Now researchers have developed an automated method of robot training by observing and copying human behavior. Why are scientists teaching robots to play soccer? The short-term motivation is to win the annual RoboCup competition, the "World Cup" of robotic development. International teams build real robots that go head to head with no human control during the game. This year's competition is in Graz, Austria in June. (Watch last year's Cup-final here.)

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