Author Archives: Ogen

Will robots ever learn to love?

The film A.I. has sparked a debate on artificial intelligence, so Roger Highfield asked leading researchers if man could build a machine with emotions.



A robot under development by Dr Stefan Schaal’s team at the Computational Learning and Motor Control Lab, University of Southern California

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Today’s Cyborgs Get An Eyeful

elcom.co.uk – 7/4/01

Thad Starner is lying flat on his back on his office couch, staring at the ceiling. Don’t bother him. He’s working.

A fascinating article giving a view of the future from USA Today.

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e-Newspaper: Record Searchlight – Redding.com News SHNS Science & Technology

Me and my robot …


Tom Kisken

Scripps Howard News Service


Adonis dances the Macarena to show how robots can simulate human movement.

Goggle-eyed Kismet is programmed to express lip-clenching anger and eyebrows-arched surprise.

And University of Southern California researchers work on teaching robots teamwork so they can cooperatively build a shelter to house astronauts on Mars.

Some academicians predict the day when machines evolve into feeling, intelligent, decision-making humanoids is still a century away. But others suggest that within 20 years robots could be built as companions for special-needs children or as caretakers that remind home-bound seniors to take medication.

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PINO the Humanoid Robot

Reasons for Designing the Humanoid Robot

What reasons are there for designing the humanoid a robot? Existing humanoid robot research centers on either the development of a humanoid machine from a mechanical engineering approach or, conversely, an analytic machine by which the mechanisms of thought ? or intelligence can be simulated and put into effect by a freely moving body reacting to diverse sensory information.

However disparate the means by which humanoid robot research has evolved, both are concerned with the human form as representative of its mechanical features. Aesthetics, we believe, will play an even larger role in the design requirements of the robot in order to grow as an industry the way automobiles and computers have evolved ? the aesthetic element playing a pivotal role in establishing harmonious co-existence between the consumer and the product. Accordingly, research that employs an element of aesthetics was considered also as a technological issue and inseparable from the robot’s primary mechanical functions.

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Expert urges people to think differently about our robot allies

By SACHIKO HIRAO

Staff writer

While the robot craze that has gripped Japan may give the impression that our future mechanical friends will resemble humans or animals, Takeo Kanade thinks otherwise.

Director of the Robotics Institute at Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh, Kanade predicts that robots will increasingly become a feature in ordinary people’s lives.

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Dances with Robots: Science News Online, June 30, 2001

The military is betting millions that technology can turn soldiers into superhumans

Peter Weiss

The legs of an aluminum skeleton hang from Homayoon Kazerooni’s backpack, its feet bolted to his boots. The lanky metal framework is part of an experimental robot, powered by a chain saw engine, that rides piggyback on Kazerooni, a mechanical engineering professor at the University of California, Berkeley. He’s trying to walk with the contraption, which weighs as much as a grown man. As long as the engine is on, the robot walks with him, and he doesn’t even feel the extra weight.

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TORNADO-INSIDER.COM – News – Giotto, The Human-eyed Robot

29 June 2001 9:01

By Luca Fornovo


Robots will see with human eyes and on mobile phones will display live, high-definition images, at a low cost. The promise of these revolutions in the world of robotics and mobile communications is made by Giotto, a special sensor conceived and designed in such a way as to resemble the retina of the human eye.

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Expert: Robots may not be able to feel emotions, but some can show them

By Byron Spice

Pittsburgh Post-Gazette


Reid Simmons has created a robot that negotiates campus hallways, and a spacefaring robot that charted its own course to a distant asteroid. He has designed robots to operate autonomously. He has taught robots to work in teams.

But he has never programmed a robot to love. To fake love, maybe, but never to experience emotion.

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Could it be?

Will robots ever evolve to the point of possessing human emotions, like the one in Spielberg’s “A.I.”? Some experts say it’s more a question of when rather than if.

By Peter Mucha

INQUIRER STAFF WRITER


This weekend, when Steven Spielberg’s A.I.: Artificial Intelligence opens, moviegoers may wonder when scientists are likely to create a smart, emotional robot like the one played by Haley Joel Osment.

That day may be surprisingly near.

By the middle of this century, some experts predict, androids could be our mental equals – and on their way to becoming the planet’s dominant creatures.

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And robots are becoming more and more adept at human behavior.

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Last fall Hasbro introduced a $100 doll called My Real Baby that senses touch and motion, changes its facial expressions, and seems to learn. It was developed by iRobot, a Massachusetts company founded by MIT’s Brooks.

In February, two Japanese companies, Kokoro Co. and CAI, demonstrated that their S DOLL robot could hold a conversation; it understands speech and talks back, complete with gestures.

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