Divers Alert Network often reminds its members to
dive with buddies and never alone. But because many
divers ignore those instructions, DAN apparently finds it
worth investing in some heavy-duty technology to make
solo diving safer.
DAN Europe is working on an underwater drone
system that would accompany a lone diver and
be able to detect if that person is in distress. The
Cognitive Autonomous Diving Buddy, CADDY for
short, is a collaborative effort between DAN Europe
and the European Union's Seventh Framework
Programme FP7, which focuses on cognitive systems
and robotics research.
CADDY actually consists of two connected autonomous
robots; one stays on the surface and the other
moves near the diver. The latter robot will interpret a
diver's behavior and is smart enough to figure out if
something is amiss. The surface robot navigates the
underwater robot, and has a communications link with
a shipboard command center if there is an emergency.
CADDY's three main functions are to guide a diver, constantly
check body language, and for commercial divers,
help them work via an automated camera and flashlight.
In an emergency, CADDY will also be able to steer a
diver to safety.
DAN Europe is currently testing the system and
measuring its maneuvering capabilities. Salih Murat Egi,
a DAN Europe research fellow and coordinator of the
CADDY project, says his team is also reviewing a system
that generates an automatic diver status report, and testing
acoustical communication technologies that relay
the diver's cognitive status to the command center. He
says, "When you consider that half the diving accidents
involve unaccompanied scuba divers, CADDY will surely
revolutionize the underwater experience."
It may be a while before it's available on your Raja
Ampat liveaboard, but you can keep up with CADDY's
progress at www.caddy-fp7.eu