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Explore the fascinating journey of robotics, tracing back to Leonardo’s imagined robot in 1495 to contemporary advancements in artificial intelligence. This concise overview elucidates the fundamental aspects of creating robots that mimic human actions: walking, grasping objects, and communicating. Discover the significance of “faking” human behavior and the incredible challenges ahead, such as improving learning capabilities and the pursuit of creating machines indistinguishable from humans. Witness the blend of art, science, and technology shaping the future of robotics.
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"So Man created robot in his own image." The artificialhumanbeing
A timeless dream "Leonardo’s robot", imagined around 1495 The film I, Robot (2004)
Introduction: A timelessdream • Creating robots in the image of men: why and how? • Walking: the cheapestway to move • Grabbing and handlingobjects • Artificialvoice • The great challenges thatwillrisenext • Improvinglearningcapability • Fakinghumanbehavior Conclusion
I.1. Walking: the cheapest way to move John Wilson’s Walkie (1930)
I.2. Grabbing and handling objects • Mandatory for robots in order to perform even very simple tasks the way a human would.
I.2. Artificial voice • A speaking robot must have a voice that sounds almost human in order to be understandable. • Impossible to generate a human voice by using a simple loudspeaker.
I.2. Artificial voice Waseda Talker
Introduction: A timeless dream • Creating robots in the image of men: why and how? • Walking: the cheapest way to move • Grabbing and handling objects • Artificial voice • The great challenges that will rise next • Improving learning capability • Faking human behavior Conclusion
II.1. Improvinglearningcapability • A robot can only perform tasks he has been programmed for. • How to learn new abilities? • Where to store them?
II.2. Faking human behavior • The unspoken purpose: to build a machine impossible to tell apart from a human being, eventually • Can we ever create a machine that can guess?
Conclusion Osaka University’s Repliee-Q1 Sony’s QRIO Honda’s ASIMO