Challenges and Opportunities of Neuromorphic Field Robotics and Automation
ICRA 2026 Workshop
June 5, 2026 - VIECON – Vienna Congress and Convention Center
Neuromorphic technology in robotics, such as event cameras and neuromorphic processors, has advanced significantly over the last three decades. Despite breakthroughs in hardware and algorithms, the adoption of neuromorphic technology in real-world robotic systems remains limited. Key challenges include real-time processing, managing high data rates, learning representations, and integration with control and planning frameworks. This workshop aims to bridge the gap between the neuromorphic and robotics communities, encouraging cross-disciplinary dialogue and fostering adoption of event-based control and sensing in field robotics and automation. Key topics include representations, event cameras in field robotics, opportunities compared to conventional image sensors, hardware, and software architectures for neuromorphic processing, event-based simultaneous localization and mapping (SLAM). We will emphasize both academic progress and industrial applications, with a focus on challenges, opportunities, and lessons from experimentation or field deployment. Attendees will gain insight into current capabilities and limitations of the technology, as well as open challenges in the field. We aim to make the workshop a forum for roboticists to gain exposure to the technology and apply it to their research domains.

| Paper title | arXiv link |
|---|---|
| Neuromorphic Monocular Depth Estimation with Uncertainty Modeling | |
| Event-Based 3D Analysis of Pigeon Flocks: A High-Frequency Dataset for Perception-Driven Swarm Robotics | |
| Benchmarking Recurrent Event-Based Object Detection for Industrial Multi-Class Recognition on MTEvent | |
| Relative State Estimation using Event-Based Propeller Sensing | |
| AdaFuse-Det: Adaptive Cross-Modal Fusion of Event Cameras and Low-Light RGB Imagery for Robust Object Detection | |
| Design of a Real-time Asynchronous Monocular Odometry for Planetary Exploration | |
| NightSight: Passive Computation for Navigation in Dark Using Events | |
| EventShiftFlow: Towards Hardware-efficient FPGA-based Flow Estimation |
npj Robotics has kindly sponsored an award for the best paper of the workshop.

For any questions, please contact us at fclad[at]seas.upenn.edu.
The Microsoft CMT service was used for managing the peer-reviewing process for this workshop. This service was provided for free by Microsoft and they bore all expenses, including costs for Azure cloud services as well as for software development and support.
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