Kansas Engineer - Fall 2021

Page 28

STUDENT NEWS

‘DeepRacer’ Competition Sharpens Programming, Coding Skills by Joel Mathis

26 | FALL 2021

Photos by Cody Howard

C

omputer science students at KU extensively tested their skills throughout the spring 2021 semester with a series of races using self-driving model cars developed by Amazon Web Services (AWS). The students in Andrew Williams’ Introduction to Artificial Intelligence class spent the semester programming their cars and virtually testing the results using AWS’ DeepRacer, a cloud-based 3D racing simulator. For the races in the last few weeks of the spring semester, though, students built a real track in the atrium of the School of Engineering’s LEEP2 building, and tested their artificial intelligence programs using 1/18th-scale race cars. “It’s a method for us to teach deep reinforcement learning — an artificial intelligence technique that allows cars to learn to drive by themselves, using their video cameras and other sensors they have,” said Williams, who at the time was a professor of electrical engineering and computer science. He has since moved on to serve as Dean of Engineering at The Citadel in Charleston, South Carolina. In artificial intelligence, “reinforcement learning” uses reward functions — essentially, points for achieving a task — to help a machine to learn. In the case of the DeepRacer cars, students deploy code, then the car receives points for staying on the track, or for completing a lap quickly. The car responds to those points and adjusts its behavior accordingly. “I’ve seen my car drive off the track a thousand times at this point,” Nelson said. “But as the car learns, it gets better and better.”

KU students aren’t just racing against each other. Using the 3D simulator, programmers from around the world compete in AWS’ monthly DeepRacer time trials. The top 10% of finishers in those races can advance to the company’s “Pro Division,” where qualifiers have an opportunity to compete for the AWS DeepRacer League Championship Cup, a live event that will be held in Las Vegas in December 2021. “Every single person on my team has qualified for the pro division,” Nelson said. Williams said the DeepRacer program gives students hands-on experience they can use when they enter the job market. “It’s interesting, different and fun, so I think they’re more engaged,” he said. “The other thing I look at — you have companies like Tesla, Google and Amazon working on cars and trucks that can drive by themselves. This is real practical experience they can put on their resumes.”

AWS DeepRacer vehicles provide computer science students with hands-on experience in programming and artificial intelligence.


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Articles inside

Donor and Industry Recognition

34min
pages 43-52

Recent Graduate Advisory Board Aims to Strengthen Relationships with Alumni

2min
pages 41-42

Gift to KU Department of Chemical & Petroleum Engineering Honors Professor

3min
page 40

KU Engineering Launches Career Accelerator Lecture Series

1min
page 39

Alumni Profiles

2min
page 38

KU Bioengineering Program Awarded Grant to Expand Opportunities for Underrepresented Students

3min
page 37

Haskell Indian Nations University KU Engineering Partner to Develop ‘Center for Justice’

4min
pages 33-34

Civil Engineering Master’s Student Lands Prestigious Fellowship

2min
page 31

KU Leading Program to Bring Teachers into Research Labs Design Education to Draw Diverse Scholars to Engineering

4min
pages 35-36

Student Achievements

2min
page 32

Engineering Student Earns Prestigious Astronaut Scholarship

3min
page 30

KU Engineering Achieves Record Highs in Degrees Awarded

1min
page 29

‘DeepRacer’ Competition Sharpens Programming Coding Skills

2min
page 28

KU Engineering Professors Wins Prestigious Fellowship for Bridge Lifespan Research

2min
page 23

Bumper Scooter Redesign Creates Opportunities for Toddler

4min
pages 26-27

Farokhi Receives National Recognition for Career Achievement

3min
page 24

Faculty Achievements

1min
page 25

Blunt Named Finalist for A.F. Harvey Engineering Research Prize

3min
page 22

Study: Constructed Wetlands Offer Best Protection for Agricultural Runoff

3min
pages 20-21

KU Working to Advance Gas Separation with Green Materials

4min
pages 18-19

Researchers Will Develop Green Technology to Recycle Refrigerants That Drive Climate Change

4min
pages 16-17

KU Awarded Grant to Study Transportation Needs for Underrepresented Youth in KC Metro

3min
pages 14-15

Sutley Named Associate Dean for Diversity, Equity Inclusion & Belonging

3min
pages 7-8

At-Home COVID-19 Test Developed at KU Moves Toward Production

2min
pages 9-10

KU Engineering Partners with Kansas Community to Test Energy-Efficient Materials

3min
page 11

Celebrating 50 Years of Diversity & Women’s Programs

5min
pages 5-6

KU Research Aims to Help People With Cognitive Impairments Use Automated Driving Systems

4min
pages 12-13
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