Author Archives: Ogen

Feature Article: Yoshihiro Kuroki: Dancing with Robots

LINDA GEPPERT

THE DANCERS STAND MOTIONLESS at their positions and the room grows quiet. But as the music starts, they begin to move, bending, turning, and waving their fans gracefully as they perform a traditional Japanese dance. Yoshihiro Kuroki watches in silence, occasionally making notes. But as the dance ends, he beams with happiness. The performance has been flawless.

There have been many performances of traditional Japanese dances over the centuries, but this one is unique, because it is performed not by human dancers but by robots. And the performance takes place not in a dance studio but in a laboratory of Sony Corp.’s Entertainment Robot Co. in Shinagawa, Japan, where Kuroki is general manager. He is the mastermind behind a series of ever more capable humanoid entertainment robots, starting with the Sony Dream Robot, or SDR, in 1997, up to the current QRIO (pronounced ‘curio’) in 2003.

These delightful machines are only 58 cm tall, about the size of a newborn infant, weigh about 7 kg, and move with 38 degrees of freedom, each with its own servomotor.

QRIO’s predecessor, the SDR4X, announced in 2002, can walk, dance, sing, speak, recognize faces, and understand continuous speech. Each robot has two charge-coupled-device cameras to detect color and position and can locate a colored ball, move toward it, and kick it into a goal. It also has contact sensors in several joints to avoid pinching real human fingers. Seeing the robot perform, it is difficult to remember that there is no sentience behind those glass eyes.

Kuroki knew he wanted to work with robots ever since his second year of high school. His school was affiliated with Waseda University in Tokyo, and one day his class visited the lab of Professor Ichiro Kato.

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AP Wire | 02/01/2004 | Giving robots a human face

Posted on Sun, Feb. 01, 2004

MATT SLAGLE

Associated Press

DALLAS – With her sparkling blue eyes, wispy eyelashes and demure smile, Hertz is the center of attention wherever she goes.

If you’re lucky enough to meet her, try to ignore the tangle of wires slinking from behind her face. If you speak with her, talk slowly and loudly. And no matter what you say, don’t be offended if she looks at you blankly and repeatedly asks, ‘What did you say?’

Hertz isn’t really a she, but rather an it, an animated robot head built in about nine months by self-titled ‘sculptor roboticist’ David Hanson.

Hanson and other robot makers believe social robots will one day serve a variety of functions: tutor, companion, even security guard.

But should they look human?

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Toyota to develop workman humanoid robot by 2005

Time is GMT 8 hours

Posted: 30 December 2003 1445 hrs

TOKYO, : Japan’s top car maker Toyota will develop a humanoid robot designed to help factory workers and provide assistance in nursing care and rescue operations.

Toyota will announce details of the project in January and plans to unveil the as-yet-unnamed robot at the 2005 World Exposition in Japan, the business daily Nihon Keizai Shimbun said.

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Unlike Honda’s ASIMO, the world’s first two-legged walking robot unveiled in 2000, and Sony’s QRIO, the world’s first jogging robot revealed this month, Toyota’s robot will be used for ‘practical’ purposes, the daily said.

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Toyota hopes the new robot can help factory workers conduct physically demanding work and provide assistance in nursing care and rescue operations, the daily said but gave no financial figures involved in the project.

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Reuters | Latest Financial News / Full News Coverage: Robots the new jogging companions?

Thu 18 December, 2003 08:03

By Edwina Gibbs

TOKYO (Reuters) – He may not be able to give you a run for your money but one quick step for Sony’s Qrio humanoid robot is one big step for robots in general.

Electronics and entertainment giant Sony said on Thursday that it had developed the world’s first running — okay, jogging — robot.

‘All around the world, universities and think tanks have been researching how to make robots run but we are pleased to announce that we have done it first,’ Toshi Doi, an executive vice president at Sony told a news conference on Thursday.

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Technology News: Japan’s Robot Developers Go Linux

By Jan Krikke

www.LinuxInsider.com,

Part of the ECT News Network

December 3, 2003

Japan’s preoccupation with consumer robots is largely driven by economic imperatives. It has an aging population, declining birthrates and a looming labor shortage, which means that the development of a standard robot platform could simply be a matter of time. However, despite its growing popularity in robotics, Linux cannot yet claim victory.

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Gizmo::Robots show off at CEATEC

Tuesday November 11, 2003

GMORPH 3


The fledgling home robotics market is set to become a multi-billion dollar global industry over the next decade and many of the technologies that will underpin the coming revolution – like those showcased last month at CEATEC Japan 2003 – are already with us.

Several leading robotics manufacturers demonstrated advances in movement, dexterity and intelligence at CEATEC (Combined Exhibition of Advanced Technologies) which adopted the theme ‘Ubiquitous Community-Forward to the Next Stage.’

Among them was HOAP-2, a robot trained in the Chinese martial art called taijiquan from Fujitsu that can stomp like a sumo wrestler and even stand on its head. Fujitsu plans to market a limited number of the robots to universities and companies in 2004.

“gmorph 3” from Wind River Systems also demonstrated exceptional agility and dexterity – its array of pressure sensors and 30 compact motors allow the robot to walk upright and perform complex movements including back flips.

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iRobot’s Robots Clear Land Mines And Clean Your House

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Most fascinating is a product called Swarm. In a room, 16 small, square robots on wheels are scattered on the floor. Each one has three lights on top resembling a traffic light–red, yellow and green. The point of the Swarm project is to be able to program lots of robots to communicate with each other using proprietary Behavior Language software. And we’re not talking about 10 or even 100 bots, but 10,000 or more. The name ‘Swarm’ comes from the robots’ ability to work like insects.

‘We especially looked at the behavior of ants and bees for this,’ says James McLurkin, Swarm Project Manager. ‘We don’t want to copy their behavior, but want to look at a working system that basically recruits workers to different sites.’

The robots communicate using an infrared light signal that begins with a chosen leader (which has an antenna on its head) and then spreads to the rest. So essentially, they ‘talk’ to each other. When this happens, the lights begin flashing. Each light has an accompanying sound. The sounds tell the robots how far away they are from each other.

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Technology Review: Segway Robot Opens Doors

Technology Research News November 11, 2003

Massachusetts Institute of Technology researchers have crossed a robotic arm with the bottom half of a Segway to make a robot named Cardea that can traverse hallways and push open doors.

Cardea, named after the Roman goddess of thresholds and door pivots, is the one-armed first prototype of a robot designed to have three arms and the ability to safely interact with humans at eye level.

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Kurt3D – An Autonomous Mobile Robot for Modelling the World in 3D

by Hartmut Surmann, Andreas Nuechter, Kai Lingemann and Joachim Hertzberg



Kurt3D is an autonomous mobile robot equipped with a reliable and precise 3D laser scanner that digitalizes environments. High quality geometric 3D maps with semantic information are automatically generated after the exploration by the robot.

Precise digital 3D models of indoor environments are needed in several applications, eg, facility management, architecture, rescue and inspection robotics. Autonomous mobile robots equipped with a 3D laser range finder are well suited for gaging the 3D data. We have equipped the autonomous mobile robot KURT2 and a mobile 3D laser range finder for the automatic generation of compact and precise 3D models. The proposed method consists of four steps.

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TCS: Tech Central Station – Robot Rights

By Glenn Harlan Reynolds

Published 10/29/2003

Robots are people, too! Or at least they will be, someday.’ That’s the rallying cry of the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Robots, and it’s beginning to become a genuine issue. We are, at present, a long way from being able to create artificial intelligence systems that are as good as human minds. But people are already beginning to talk about the subject (the U.S. Patent Office has already issued a — rather dubious — patent on ethical laws for artificial intelligences, and the International Bar Association even sponsored a mock trial on robot rights last month).

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