Autonomous technology company, Brian Corp is leading a new collaboration to advance technologies for autonomous robots operating in complex commercial and industrial environments.
Brain Corp is collaborating with the University of California San Diego to advance the semantic mapping and contextual intelligence technologies for the autonomous robots with the aim of shaping the future of physical artificial intelligence (AI), taking autonomous systems towards a deeper understanding of the physical world.
The collaboration focuses on advancing what Brain Corp describes as a “contextual grounding layer,” an intelligent digital representation of physical spaces that gives autonomous systems the situational awareness to comprehend what is happening around them and intuitively respond, according to a press release.
This deeper layer of contextual understanding is essential to safely integrating advanced AI models into realworld commercial applications, enabling systems to intuitively adapt to their physical environments and seamlessly interact with people.
Rather than automating a single robotic task or workflow, the company is creating the intelligent platform infrastructure capable of orchestrating fleets of autonomous systems, fixed sensors, and AI-powered agents at enterprise scale, as per the release.
“Simultaneous Localization and Mapping, or SLAM, helped move robots beyond fixed industrial settings and into more dynamic environments. “Today, the industry is exploring AI systems that operate directly from visual data, but we believe contextual 3D semantic maps remain essential for robust autonomy in complex physical spaces.
Our collaboration with Brain Corp creates an exciting opportunity to demonstrate how richer spatial understanding can improve contextual awareness, resilience, and operational performance in real-world robotic deployments,” a faculty member in the Jacobs School’s Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, said Dr. Atanasov said.
The collaboration builds on Brain Corp’s large-scale operational footprint, including more than 50,000 autonomous robots deployed globally and over 25 million hours of autonomous operations across commercial environments.













