KAIST Triumphs at ICRA and CVPR 2026 Challenges

Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology
From left: the ACDC-K Team, Prof. Hyun Myung, and the Curaytor Team.
From left: the ACDC-K Team, Prof. Hyun Myung, and the Curaytor Team.

< From left: the ACDC-K Team, Prof. Hyun Myung, and the Curaytor Team. >

Two research teams from KAIST have claimed first place in international challenge competitions held at the world's premier robotics and computer vision conferences.

KAIST (President Kwang-Hyung Lee) announced that the ACDC-K Team and the Curaytor Team, both from the laboratory of Prof. Hyun Myung in the School of Electrical Engineering, won first place in international challenge competitions held in conjunction with the IEEE International Conference on Robotics and Automation (ICRA 2026) and the IEEE/CVF Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition (CVPR 2026), respectively.

The achievement highlights the global competitiveness of KAIST's robotic perception and spatial intelligence technologies, with two teams from the same laboratory securing victories in leading international competitions across distinct research fields.

The ACDC-K Team won first place among more than 60 participating teams in the SLAM (Simultaneous Localization And Mapping) category of the Hilti×Trimble SLAM Challenge 2026, held during the Open Challenges in Robotics for Asset Inspection (OCRAIM) Workshop at ICRA 2026 in Vienna, Austria, from June 1 to 5.

Example of SLAM (Simultaneous Localization and Mapping) results generated by the ACDC-K Team's proposed technology in a 40 m × 30 m construction environment.
Example of SLAM (Simultaneous Localization and Mapping) results generated by the ACDC-K Team's proposed technology in a 40 m × 30 m construction environment.

< Example of SLAM (Simultaneous Localization and Mapping) results generated by the ACDC-K Team's proposed technology in a 40 m × 30 m construction environment. >

Jointly organized by Hilti, Trimble, and the University of Oxford, the challenge evaluates robotic localization and mapping performance using sensor data collected from real construction sites. Participants were required to address practical challenges frequently encountered in construction environments, including non-overlapping front and rear fisheye camera configurations, low-texture indoor scenes, and rapid camera motion.

To tackle these challenges, the ACDC-K Team developed a robust visual-inertial SLAM system that fuses front and rear fisheye camera data with inertial measurements. By integrating feature-point and feature-line observations with adaptive constraints and correction mechanisms, the team achieved highly reliable localization and mapping performance in complex construction environments.

Meanwhile, the Curaytor Team won first place among eight participating teams in the Nothing Stands Still (NSS) Challenge 2026, held during the Computer Vision for the Built World (CV4AEC) Workshop at CVPR 2026 in Denver, Colorado, from June 3 to 7.

Example of multiway registration results generated by the Curaytor Team's proposed technology in a large-scale environment covering approximately 4,960 m²
Example of multiway registration results generated by the Curaytor Team's proposed technology in a large-scale environment covering approximately 4,960 m²

< Example of multiway registration results generated by the Curaytor Team's proposed technology in a large-scale environment covering approximately 4,960 m² >

Jointly organized by Stanford University, ETH Zurich, and Oregon State University, the NSS Challenge evaluates 3D point cloud registration technologies for construction and industrial environments that evolve over time.

The Curaytor Team developed a novel multi-registration framework capable of aligning multiple LiDAR scans collected across different times and locations. The framework integrates feature extraction, correspondence estimation, robust global registration, registration confidence assessment, and change-aware refinement techniques. As a result, the team achieved highly accurate registration performance even in environments containing structural changes and dynamic objects.

. Curaytor Team receiving the award. Kim Daebeom (Team Leader, Ph.D. candidate).
. Curaytor Team receiving the award. Kim Daebeom (Team Leader, Ph.D. candidate).

< . Curaytor Team receiving the award. Kim Daebeom (Team Leader, Ph.D. candidate). >

"This achievement demonstrates the robustness of our visual-inertial SLAM and 3D LiDAR registration technologies in complex and constantly changing real-world environments," said Prof. Hyun Myung. "It is particularly meaningful that our students secured first-place finishes in highly competitive international challenges hosted at two of the world's most prestigious conferences in robotics and computer vision."

Prof. Hyun Myung's laboratory has consistently demonstrated excellence in spatial intelligence research. The laboratory previously won first place in the LiDAR track and ranked first among academic teams in the vision track of the Hilti SLAM Challenge in 2023. In addition, the Curaytor Team successfully defended its title in the NSS Challenge, securing back-to-back championships in 2025 and 2026.

. ACDC-K Team at the award ceremony. From left: Jinwoo Jeon (Ph.D. candidate, Team Leader) and Prof. Hyun Myung.
. ACDC-K Team at the award ceremony. From left: Jinwoo Jeon (Ph.D. candidate, Team Leader) and Prof. Hyun Myung.

< . ACDC-K Team at the award ceremony. From left: Jinwoo Jeon (Ph.D. candidate, Team Leader) and Prof. Hyun Myung. >

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