thumb | right | Navlab models 1 (farthest) through 5 (front). Navlab 5 completed the first coast-to-coast drive with 98.2% autonomy. All five vehicles were developed at Carnegie Mellon University, from 1984 through 1995. Navlab is a series of autonomous and semi-autonomous vehicles developed by teams from The Robotics Institute at the School of Computer Science, Carnegie Mellon University. Later models were produced under a new department created specifically for the research called "The Carnegie Mellon University Navigation Laboratory". Navlab 5 notably steered itself almost all the way from
thumb | right | Navlab models 1 (farthest) through 5 (front). Navlab 5 completed the first coast-to-coast drive with 98.2% autonomy. All five vehicles were developed at Carnegie Mellon University, from 1984 through 1995. Navlab is a series of autonomous and semi-autonomous vehicles developed by teams from The Robotics Institute at the School of Computer Science, Carnegie Mellon University. Later models were produced under a new department created specifically for the research called "The Carnegie Mellon University Navigation Laboratory". Navlab 5 notably steered itself almost all the way from Pittsburgh to San Diego.
==History== Research on computer controlled vehicles began at Carnegie Mellon in 1984 as part of the DARPA Strategic Computing Initiative and production of the first vehicle, Navlab 1, began in 1986. Navlab 1 burned in 1989 when conditioning system leaked liquid onto the computers.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).