Bowing, Scraping Japanese Robot



Without human intervention, most robots these days can do absolutely nothing – they rely on us entirely for guidance, whether that’s real time or in the form of being programmed in advance. Naturally, a day will come when machines can learn and teach themselves what to do; something Japan’s National Institute of Information and Communications Technology is working on right now.
The latest project from the Institute’s Spoken Language Communication Group is a 155cm, 85kg robot that has achieved a degree of autonomous learning through gestures.

The machine is yet to make its public debut, but reports suggest [Subscription link] it can understand the meaning of a human pointing a finger at something or – this is from Japan, after all – bowing to it.

In return, the robot can repeat the same gestures in the appropriate circumstances – such as pointing a direction out and then moving that way – showing it has learned without formal teaching.

[via Tech.co.uk]


Post a Comment

Your Ad Here

Want to subscribe?

 Subscribe in a reader Or, subscribe via email:
Enter your email address:  
Find entries :
Record Internet Radio with Tags  |  Anime Ranking  |  Wills  |  Cheap Magazine Subscriptions  |  Loans

40 queries. 1.450 seconds.
eXTReMe Tracker