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1981 – Quester Micromouse – David Buckley (British)

See Quester details and other references in David Buckley's website here. Quester was originally designed to be a micromouse maze solver, and later converted into a general purpose robot with  added gripper (see above). David also has a reference to the history of Micromouse competitions here. For the original Micromouse…
Read more » 1981 – Quester Micromouse – David Buckley (British)

1977-79 – “Moonlight Special” Battelle Inst. (American)

"Moonlight Special" Photo at  Battelle Pacific Northwest Laboratories  Top - "Moonlight Special" , Middle- "Moonlight Flash"  , Bottom Right - "Midnight Express" all in full dress. In 1977, Machine Design sponsored yet another mouse contest, "The great Clock Climbing Contest", coupled with the rediscovered information of the 1972 "Le Mouse…
Read more » 1977-79 – “Moonlight Special” Battelle Inst. (American)

1957 – “Gizzmo” Maze-solving Robot – Lauren V. Merritt (American)

Oakland Tribune 22 Aug 1957 Lauren V. Merritt, 17, son of Mr. and Mrs. L.C. Merritt of El Cerrito, was concerned. "Gizzmo is acting up," he said. "Gizzmo" is a maze-solving robot. Push a button anywhere and a light bounces through a ?complicated maze? and "Gizzmo" remembers the way out.…
Read more » 1957 – “Gizzmo” Maze-solving Robot – Lauren V. Merritt (American)

1966 – Mechanical Rat – Meredith Thring (British)

Pittsburgh Post-Gazette - Feb 1, 1967 ........  He [Professor Meredith Wooldridge Thring, 51, professor of mechanical engineering at London's Queen Mary College] suggested a trip to one of his laboratories. "Here you see our mechanical rat," he explained. He pointed to a gadget about the size of a boy's electric…
Read more » 1966 – Mechanical Rat – Meredith Thring (British)

1962 – Mechanical Maze with Memory – R.J. Curran (American)

Robert J. Curran's Mechanical Maze is included here as it is essentially a mechanical computer, exhibiting similar characteristics as other electro-mechanical maze solvers. As the mouse travels a path, if it has to back out due to a dead-end, the return pass triggers a mechanical latch to give the maze a…
Read more » 1962 – Mechanical Maze with Memory – R.J. Curran (American)

1962 – MELPAR Bionic Maze – R.J. Lee (American)

pdf - Popular Electronics October 1962 Bionics Bionic "Mouse." As mentioned earlier, RCA is working on a far more complicated moving-target indicator containing hundreds of neurons which operates on the same principle. But perhaps the most important piece of neural-bionic hardware to come out of the laboratories so far is a…
Read more » 1962 – MELPAR Bionic Maze – R.J. Lee (American)

1959 – Labyrinth solver with Ariadne’s Thread – Zemanek & Eier (Austrian)

Now in the Vienna Technical Museum. Period photo showing Richard Eier opening the covers of the Labyrinth. Zitat:  Gerhard Chroust, "Cybernetic Animals at the Technical University of Vienna" , in IFSR Newsletter, Vol. 18, Nummer 2, Seite(n) 2, 1999  CYBERNETIC ANIMALS AT THE TECHNICAL UNIVERSITY OF VIENNA G. Chroust Around…
Read more » 1959 – Labyrinth solver with Ariadne’s Thread – Zemanek & Eier (Austrian)

1955 – Electronic Mouse Maze Solver – Harry Rudloe (American)

The original article appeared in Scientific American, The Amateur Scientist,  An Electronic Mouse That Learns From Experience by Harry Rudloe, 1955 Mar, pg 116 .   This copy from C. L. Stong.  The Amateur Scientist.  Ill. by Roger Hayward.  S&S, 1960.  The Electronic Mouse That Learns From Experience, pp. 394-398.  Harry…
Read more » 1955 – Electronic Mouse Maze Solver – Harry Rudloe (American)

1955-57 – Maze Solver – M. Gavrilova (М.А.Гаврилова) (Russian)

Maze currently found in Polytechnic Museum of Science and Technology , Moscow. Cybernetic model "Mouse in the maze" (see video clip here) [Thanks Joseba Arruabarrena as the video clip is now on youtube.]  One of the first developments in the field of cybernetics in the Soviet Union. Modeling ability to…
Read more » 1955-57 – Maze Solver – M. Gavrilova (М.А.Гаврилова) (Russian)

1953 – “Franken” Maze-Solving Machine – Ivan and Bert Sutherland

FRANKEN The original Franken maze solver was designed and built by Bert and Ivan Sutherland. I suspect it was built for Edmund C. Berkeley.  Berkeley , it appears, had used the early version as a prototype, and engaged his other associates, namely Bob Jensen, Juli Skalski and Stan Skalski in drawing up…
Read more » 1953 – “Franken” Maze-Solving Machine – Ivan and Bert Sutherland

1954 – Maze-Solving Machine – J. A. Deutsch (British)

Anthony Deutsch, aged 26, with his maze runner from Oxford University's Institute of  Experimental Psychology. The head-lamp on the trolley is turned on, and various photo-electric cells are mounted at strategic points in the maze. Deutsch's Maze runner was considered the most sophisticated at the time. It was capable of transferring…
Read more » 1954 – Maze-Solving Machine – J. A. Deutsch (British)

1937 – Maze Solver – Hugh Bradner (American)

The above is an excerpt from Cordeshi's book "Discovery of the Artificial". Hugh Bradner was at the Psychology laboratory at the University of Miami, Ohio. His robot learnt by trial and error. The cart was 12 inches long, 6 inches wide with 2 wheels on a front axle. a driving…
Read more » 1937 – Maze Solver – Hugh Bradner (American)
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