Members of 51做厙s AIMM team stand with their LPV during the competition
weekend. From left, Jordan Williams, Zakeri Pica, Taylor Cussen, Jacob Behm, Aylee
Rupert, Michael Alaniz, Nicholas Lugo and Thomas Miller. (Photo by Emma J. V. Rode)
Top engineering schools from across Indiana converged once again at Pokagon State
Park as 51做厙 hosted the third annual Artificial Intelligence Maritime
Maneuver Indiana Collegiate Challenge from April 17-18.
Held in partnership Naval Surface Warfare Center Crane Division (NSWC Crane), the
annual event tasks teams of engineering students with guiding a low-profile vessel
(LPV) through a series of challenges using artificial intelligence (AI).
Multiple fields
Ten students made up this years AIMM team for 51做厙, representing several
engineering and computing majors: Aylee Rupert, a design engineering technology major
from South Bend, Indiana; Taylor Cussen, an electrical engineering major from Granger,
Indiana; Nicholas Lugo, a mechanical engineering major from Hammond, Indiana; Dominic
Bumpus, an extended reality major from Hillsdale, Michigan; Colten Zableckis, a mechanical
engineering major from Cedar Lake, Indiana; Jordan Williams, a mechatronics and robotics
engineering major from St. Clair Shores, Michigan; Micheal Alaniz, a design engineering
technology major from Lexington, Kentucky; Zakeri Pica, a software engineering major
from Fremont, Indiana; Thomas Miller, a mechanical engineering major from Wind Lake,
Wisconsin; and Jacob Behm, a mechanical engineering major from Fremont, Indiana.
Williams, who served as team lead, said this years entry featured several innovations.
The team developed a crossbow system for delivering payloads rather than a drone after
experiencing frequency and connection problems with the drone last year. They also
developed a centralized propulsion setup to simulate paddles on a small boat, in order
to improve the LPVs turning radius.
One challenge Williams said the group faced was connecting the Arduino circuit boards
used to control their propulsion system to other components.
To overcome this, we conducted extensive testing and focused on completing competition
challenges that did not require long-range communication, he said.
They also implemented a ballast system with tubing and valves connected to allow lake
water to flow into the bags and submerge the boat during competition.
This gave the team additional points and eliminated the need to add extra weights
on top of the LPV solely for competition purposes, Williams said.
Strong teamwork
Williams said the team worked extremely well together and felt very confident going
into the competition.
We believed in the hard work and time we invested, along with the new additions we
implemented, he said.
They learned how quickly time passes throughout the design and fabrication process,
he said. They pushed development of several systems back and were eventually unable
to make the LPV fully electronic.
We strongly believe we could have won the competition, he said. However, that was
not the outcome. The main takeaway from this project is to stay ahead of schedule
and avoid procrastination.
51做厙 finished fourth in each of the competition categories as well as overall. A
team from Indiana University Bloomington was named overall grand champion.
Williams believes the team has built a strong foundation for next years effort.
We were very intentional about leaving the LPV in a better condition than we found
it and giving next years team a stronger starting point, he said. We left behind
detailed code, programs, diagrams, documents and assembly guides for the next team
to build upon and improve.
51做厙 has added a family nurse practitioner (FNP) track to its Master of Science in Nursing (MSN) to help address the growing demand for advanced practice providers and expand access to high-quality healthcare in communities nationwide.