Cuddly ‘social robots’ that make social networks child-safe developed

London, May 8 (ANI): Scientists have come up with small, cute and furry interactive “social robots” called Petimos to help protect children when they make friends on social networks.

Petimos, which work in conjunction with an online social network called Petimo-World in which they are represented by avatars, are due to be launched later this year.

The revolutionary robos are aimed at 7 to 10-year-olds.

Children will only be able to accept new online “friends” if their Petimos are brought into physical contact first, to guard against cyberbullies and paedophiles masquerading as children, reports New Scientist.

“Internet and text-based communication is only a small part of human communication that we have evolved with,” says the device”s inventor, Adrian David Cheok at the National University of Singapore. “I want to use new media to help develop more natural human forms of communication. Petimo is one step in this direction.” (ANI)

Researchers operate biomedical robots from different locations worldwide via Internet

Washington, September 18 (ANI): Experts from the University of Washington and SRI International have jointly developed a new software protocol, to standardize the way biomedical robots are managed over the Internet.

Nine research teams from universities and research institutes around the world recently made a successful demonstration of biomedical robots operated from different locations in the U.S., Europe, and Asia with the help of the ‘Interoperable Telesurgical Protocol’.

In a 24-hour period, each participating group connected over the Internet, and controlled robots at different locations.

The tests performed demonstrated how a wide variety of robot and controller designs can seamlessly interoperate, allowing researchers to work together easily and more efficiently.

The demonstration also evaluated the feasibility of robotic manipulation from multiple sites, and was conducted to measure time and performance for evaluating laparoscopic surgical skills.

“Although many telemanipulation systems have common features, there is currently no accepted protocol for connecting these systems. We hope this new protocol serves as a starting point for the discussion and development of a robust and practical Internet-type standard that supports the interoperability of future robotic systems,” said SRI’s Tom Low.

The protocol is expected to allow engineers and designers that usually develop technologies independently, to work collaboratively, determine which designs work best, encourage widespread adoption of the new communications protocol, and help robotics research to evolve more rapidly.

Its early adoption may encourage robotic systems to be developed with interoperability in mind, and avoid future incompatibilities.

“We’re very pleased with the success of the event in which almost all of the possible connections between operator stations and remote robots were successful. We were particularly excited that novel elements such as a simulated robot and an exoskeleton controller worked smoothly with the other remote manipulation systems,” said Professor Blake Hannaford of the University of Washington. (ANI)

Robots may soon be serving the elderly at home just like humans do

Washington, August 29 (ANI): Elderly people with limited mobility may soon come to be served by robots in a manner as if they are being served by other persons, thanks to a collaborative study by three University of Illinois at Chicago engineers and a Rush University nursing specialist.

“We want to help elderly people communicate with robots, to tell them what they need, and to perform physical activities,” said Milos Zefran, UIC associate professor of electrical and computer engineering.

The three-year study, supported by a grant of 989,000 dollars from the National Science Foundation, is aimed at developing software to allow the elderly to communicate with robots that can respond to a wide range of verbal language, non-verbal gestures, and touch.

“If we can help the elderly remain independent and continue living in their own homes, that will improve their health outlook while relieving the burden on family members and health care providers,” said Zefran, the lead researcher.

The researchers say that their communication interface software will have at its core a novel adaptive and reliable recognition methodology called Recognition by Indexing and Sequencing (RISq), which will allow the robot to comprehend speech altered by impairments and to learn and adapt to such speech.

To enable a robot to understand and correctly respond to various forms of human touch, the researchers will combine techniques from natural language processing and haptics, a scientific term to describe the computerized sense of touch.

They say that the robot will also know how to respond to the user safely when performing everyday chores, such as cooking or making a bed.

“We’ll start by observing interaction between human helpers and the elderly. We’ll identify what kind of language, physical interactions and non-verbal interactions are used. Then we’ll develop a mathematical framework to model this interaction so it can be treated by the robot as a single way of communicating,” Zefran said.

The researchers say that they will program and test a robot, in order to devise refinements, as the project progresses.

“The human-robot interface is really a long-standing, open problem that won’t be solved in three years. But we’ll have a working prototype by then, and we’ll know what additional research needs to be done,” Zefran said.

He believes that this research project may also find widespread use in delivery of institutionally based health care, where routine tasks now done by nurses could be handled by robots.

“If robots can alleviate some of the burden nurses face, they then could spend more time where they’re really needed — providing the human contact that a robot can’t replace,” he said.

Zefran has revealed that his work will include developing seminars or a new graduate or upper-level undergraduate course that considers the various factors that allow robots to perform more sophisticated tasks. (ANI)

Collingwood says he knows he has to improve to keep his place

London, Aug.26 (ANI): England middle order batsman Paul Collingwood has said that he knows he has to improve as a batsman to keep his place in the England side.

Collingwood, who takes over as England’s captain this week for a one-dayer against Ireland in Belfast on Thursday and two Twenty20 internationals against Australia next week, was quoted by The Independent as saying: “I know I am going to have to tinker a bit with technique and become a better player to be able to stay in the side.”

“But I am willing to do that. I am still at an age when I am enjoying my cricket. He [Trott] came in and had a dream debut and I understand the position I am in. I am going to have to work my absolute nuts off to keep my place. I know I can do it and I still feel I am fit enough and mentally strong enough to do that,” he added.

After his match-saving innings of 75 in Cardiff, Collingwood’s final four innings were worth just 42 runs.

The Australians shut off Collingwood’s leg-side options, and now he is in the familiar position of fighting for his place in the side at the age of 33.

“I’ve had a great year playing Test cricket,” he said. “Look at my stats, they have been good. I would have loved to have played a lot better in last few Tests but the innings in Cardiff went a long way to winning these Ashes,” he says in his favour.

Perhaps it was the knowledge this could be his last crack at the Australians which made Collingwood appear the most nervous England player on Sunday, when he dropped several catches, including one at slip he would normally take with his cap pulled over his eyes.

“People sometimes think we are robots and don’t have emotions and nerves don’t get to us but believe me the closer you get to winning the Ashes the more nervous you become,” he said. (ANI)

Robot taught to smile and frown through self-guided learning

Washington, July 9 (ANI): Scientists at the University of California, San Diego, have revealed that a hyper-realistic Einstein robot has learnt to smile and make facial expressions through a process of self-guided learning.

The researchers say that they took the aid of machine learning to “empower” their robot to learn to make realistic facial expressions.

“As far as we know, no other research group has used machine learning to teach a robot to make realistic facial expressions,” said Tingfan Wu, the computer science Ph.D. student from the UC San Diego Jacobs School of Engineering who presented this advance on June 6 at the IEEE International Conference on Development and Learning.

The researchers have even uploaded a video showing the Einstein robot head performing asymmetric random facial movements as a part of the expression learning process on the website YouTube.

The faces of robots are increasingly realistic, and the number of artificial muscles that controls them is rising.

It was in light of this trend that the researchers from the Machine Perception Laboratory are studying the face and head of their robotic Einstein, hoping that their work may help them find ways to automate the process of teaching robots to make lifelike facial expressions.

According to them, the Einstein robot they worked on has about 30 facial muscles, each moved by a tiny servo motor connected to the muscle by a string.

The researchers point out that developmental psychologists speculate that infants learn to control their bodies through systematic exploratory movements, including babbling to learn to speak.

Initially, these movements appear to be executed in a random manner as infants learn to control their bodies and reach for objects.

“We applied this same idea to the problem of a robot learning to make realistic facial expressions,” said Javier Movellan, the senior author on the paper presented at ICDL 2009 and the director of UCSD’s Machine Perception Laboratory, housed in Calit2, the California Institute for Telecommunications and Information Technology.

The research team may have achieved promising results, but they admit that some of the learned facial expressions are still awkward. One potential explanation is that their model may be too simple to describe the coupled interactions between facial muscles and skin.

To begin the learning process, the UC San Diego researchers directed the Einstein robot head to twist and turn its face in all directions, a process called “body babbling”.

During that period, the robot could see itself on a mirror and analyse its own expression using facial expression detection software created at UC San Diego called CERT (Computer Expression Recognition Toolbox).

That provided the data necessary for machine learning algorithms to learn a mapping between facial expressions and the movements of the muscle motors.

After the robot had learnt the relationship between facial expressions and the muscle movements required to make them, the researchers made it learn to make facial expressions it had never encountered.

For example, the robot learned eyebrow narrowing, which requires the inner eyebrows to move together and the upper eyelids to close a bit to narrow the eye aperture.

“During the experiment, one of the servos burned out due to misconfiguration. We therefore ran the experiment without that servo. We discovered that the model learned to automatically compensate for the missing servo by activating a combination of nearby servos,” the authors wrote in the paper presented at the 2009 IEEE International Conference on Development and Learning.

“Currently, we are working on a more accurate facial expression generation model as well as systematic way to explore the model space efficiently,” said Wu, the computer science PhD student.

Wu concedes that his team’s “body babbling” approach may not be the most efficient way to explore the model of the face.

While the primary goal of this work was to solve the engineering problem of how to approximate the appearance of human facial muscle movements with motors, the researchers say this kind of work could also lead to insights into how humans learn and develop facial expressions. (ANI)

Jumping robots may soon find role in military service

London, May 10 (ANI): Robots that can leap 8 metres vertically to clear walls or fences may soon find themselves in the military.

Sandia National Laboratories’ prototype Urban Hopper can really do wonders just by hopping.

Now robot maker Boston Dynamics has landed the job of producing a military version with a dash of more self-control.

US Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), which is funding the programme, says it wants the hopper for urban reconnaissance and intelligence gathering – although it admits it could also be fitted with a raft of weapons, reports New Scientist.

Sandia’s shoebox-sized prototype, which is driven by an electric motor, rolls along on wheels. It jumps using a gas piston which is powered by methylacetylene and nitrous oxide.

However, its leaps so far are pretty haphazard.

“The existing hoppers do not maintain a stable orientation during hops, but tumble randomly,” says DARPA spokesman Mark Peterson. (ANI)

Now, a robot becomes ‘Facebooker’!

London, May 7 (ANI): A robot is being given its own Facebook profile page in a bid to bridge the divide between humans and robots.

With the development, researchers are hoping to foster meaningful relationships with people.

The page will be populated with interactions the robot has with people as well as photos of the time it spends in human company.

The idea is of Dr Nikolaus Mavridis and co-researchers as they look into ways of overcoming the reluctance of people to stay in touch with robots, reports The BBC.

In a paper on the pre-print website Archive.org server, the researchers say they want to find out if this can be thwarted by giving humans and robots a pool of shared memories.

The platform for exploring the problem is a robot created by Mavridis and colleagues from the Interactive Robots and Media Lab (IRML) at the University of the United Arab Emirates plus co-workers in Germany and Greece.

The robot has three software modules that aid it human interaction. One module distinguishes faces of humans and the pictures they post on Facebook.

A language module allows the machine to have real-time discussions and helps it continue a catalog of its friends and their data on Facebook. This allows it to maintain its own Facebook profile. It also has a supplementary range finder, touch screen and stereo camera.

The robot is named and modeled after Arabic scholar Ibn Sina aka Avicenna.

The robots interactions with humans will be logged on its Facebook profile. (ANI)

‘US needs to call off drone strikes in Pak’

Lahore, May. 3 (ANI): The top adviser to the US army chief in Afghanistan, David Kilcullen, has observed that the US drone strikes in Pakistan are creating more enemies than eliminating them, and hence, needed to be “called off.”

Responding to a congressman on what the US government should do in Pakistan, he said: “We need to call off the drones.”

The Daily Times quoted Kilcullen, as saying that he has no objection to killing “bad guys” in Pakistan.

However, he added that the strikes were creating more enemies than they eliminate.

Kilcullen said that the drone strikes, which were “highly unpopular”, gave rise to a feeling of anger that unites the population with the Taliban and could lead to “loss of Pakistani government control over its own population”.

He said that insurgents used the drone strikes to stir up anti-Western and anti-government sentiment.

Another problem, Kilcullen noted, was “using robots from the air looks both cowardly and weak”. (ANI)

China to launch robots for lone elderly

New Delhi, April 26 (ANI): Chinese scientists are preparing for the market launch of robots developed to look after lone elderly people.

According to Li Ruifeng, a member of the project with the Harbin Institute of Technology, a 1.6-meter tall robot would cater to the needs of the elderly with specifically designed functions.

These would include getting food, medicine, sounding alarms in case of water or gas leakage, sending texts or video images via wireless communications, and even entertaining their owners with a song or by playing chess, reports the China Daily.

Li said steps were being considered to make the robot, developed independently in China, fall under the affordable price range of 4,000-7,000 U.S. dollars.

He said: “We are working on testing the precision functions and ways to reduce the cost in preparations for an anticipated market launch of the robot in two to three years.” (ANI)

Now, a robot vacuum cleaner that senses human emotions

London, March 29 (ANI): University of Calgary researchers have announced the invention of a specially-equipped robot vacuum cleaner that can sense human emotions.

The scientists say that the Roomba robot vacuum cleaner uses a special headband to capture bioelectric signals from the forehead of a human user, and then infers stress from muscle tension readings.

The system involves a control software programme that reinterprets natural muscle tension as estimating the user’s stress level, they add.

“Two distinct robotic behaviours corresponding to two extreme emotional states, either relaxed or stressed, are triggered when the stress reading reach a threshold. Robot actions are then influenced by these stress readings. When a person shows high stress (~levels 3 and 4), the robot enters its cleaning mode but moves away from the user so as not annoy them. When a person is relaxed (~level 1), the robot (if cleaning) approaches the person and then stops, simulating a pet sitting next to its owner. If the reading is in between these two levels, the robot continues operating in its current mode until the stress reading reaches a threshold,” New Scientist magazine quoted the researchers as saying.

Telling about the unique feature of this system, the researchers said that the robot’s behaviour is controlled by human emotion instead of any explicit commands.

The university team have described the new system in a paper titled ‘Using Bio-electrical Signals to Influence the Social Behaviours of Domesticated Robots’. (ANI)

Robots take centre stage in U.S. war in Afghanistan

Washington, Mar.24 (ANI): The U.S. military is deploying the robots to Afghanistan to navigate the country’s treacherous terrain.

Called BigDogs, these robots are being deployed in addition to big guns.

The BigDogs – four-legged robots that can navigate the country’s treacherous terrain – and pilotless helicopters than can transport tons of supplies to very remote bases are just two of the new weapons being tested in Afghanistan, reports Fox News.

The machine’s creator, Boston Dynamics, has a motto – “dedicated to the way things move” – and that’s precisely what is both jarring and fascinating about its invention.

Using a gasoline engine that emits an eerie lawnmower buzz, BigDog has animal-inspired articulated legs that absorb shock and recycle kinetic energy from one step to the next.

Its robot brain, a sophisticated computer, controls locomotion sensors that adapt rapidly to the environment. The entire control system regulates, steers and navigates ground contact. A laser gyroscope keeps BigDog on his metal paws – even when the robot slips, stumbles or is kicked over.

Boston Dynamics says BigDog can run as fast as 4 miles per hour, walk slowly, lie down and climb slopes up to 35 degrees. BigDog’s heightened sense can also survey the surrounding terrain and become alert to potential danger.

All told, the BigDog bears an uncanny resemblance to a living organic animal.

Routine helicopter flights operating 24 hours a day, year round, are crucial for the American mission.

The Marine Corps has recently called for unmanned cargo flights to carry essentials to isolated areas that can be reached only by air.

Enter the K-MAX, a remote-controlled helicopter designed to transport heavy loads – even in Afghanistan’s high altitudes.

The K-MAX’s unique rotor design – two intermeshed rotors turning in opposite directions and slightly angled to prevent the blades from colliding – give this unmanned aircraft a distinct advantage.

“All the energy goes into the lift and eliminates the need for the tail rotor,” said Frans Jurgens, spokesman for Kaman Aerospace Corp, which manufactures the K-MAX.

The design enables the relatively small chopper to tow up to 6,000 pounds.

“The K-MAX is basically an aerial truck,” Jurgens said. (ANI)

Humans can read robotic body language

London, Mar 23 (ANI): A robot’s eyes may not be the windows to its soul, but they can certainly help humans guess the machine’s intentions, according to a new study.

Researchers led by Bilge Mutlu at Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, have demonstrated that robots “leak” non-verbal information through eye movements when interacting with humans.

Mutlu said that humans constantly give off non-verbal cues and interpret the signals of others, without realising it at a conscious level.

However, the interpretive skills become irrelevant with robots because they leak no information, making it virtually impossible to read their intentions.

The researchers tested strategies to improve robots’ body language using a guessing game played by a human and a humanoid robot.

The robot is programmed to choose one object from around a dozen resting on a table, without making a move to actually pick it up.

The human must work out the object it has mentally selected, through a series of yes and no questions.

The researchers enrolled 26 participants in the study, who took on average 5.5 questions to work out the correct object when the robot simply sat motionless across the table and answered verbally.

In the second trial, it answered in exactly the same way, but also swivelled its eyes to glance at its chosen object in the brief pause before answering two of the first three questions.

The participants needed fewer questions to identify the correct object (an average of just 5.0 and a statistically significant result) when they came face to face with a robot “leaking” information.hen the experiment was repeated with the lifelike Geminoid with realistic rubbery skin, around three-quarters of participants said that they hadn’t noticed the short glances.

Mutlu said that the improvement in scores suggested that they subconsciously detected the signals, reports New Scientist magazine.

According to him, the study suggests that people make attributions of mental states to robots just like they do to humans, although apparently only as long as the robot appears to be lifelike.

Experts have said that simply giving robots the ability to turn towards a user or nod during a conversation are important for improving the efficiency and quality of human-robot interactions.

Mutlu presented his work at the Human Robot Interaction 2009 conference in La Jolla, California, last week. (ANI)

Soon, robots to replace army medics on battleground

London, Mar 5 (ANI): Robots may soon replace army medics on the battlefield, say researchers.

Scientists hope to replace Mobile Army Surgical Hospital with “Trauma Pod” including robot surgeons and nurses, in the next 10 years.

The three-armed surgical robot, being developed by Pentagon’s Defence Advanced Research Projects Agency (Darpa) is currently under trials.

It is assisted by 12 other robotic systems, including a voice-activated “Hot Lips”, the nickname given to chief nurse Major Margaret Houlihan in 70s hit TV series M*A*S*H.

Its single arm passes instruments to the robot surgeon and disposes of used equipment.

A third “circulating nurse” robot gives out right tools, while the Pod’s bed monitors vital signs and administers fluids and oxygen.

The purpose of the Trauma Pod is to provide a quick “temporary fix” to wounded soldiers before being taken to the hospital.

“The system will focus on damage control surgery, the minimum necessary to stabilise someone. It could provide airway control, relieve immediate life-threatening injuries such as a collapsed lung, or stop bleeding temporarily,” the Telegraph quoted Pablo Garcia, from project leaders SRI International, based in Menlo Park, California, US as telling New Scientist magazine.

The surgeon robot, remote-controlled by a human from a distance away, will communicate with and instruct the other robots.

One of its three arms holds an endoscope to allow the human controller to see inside the patient, while the other two grip surgical tools.

Garcia added robot could be allowed to carry out some simple tasks without human help, such as placing stitches or tying knots.

It has successfully passed the first phase of a feasibility trial where they treated a mannequin with bullet injuries by inserting a plastic rube into a damaged blood vessel and operating to close a perforated bowel.

“Three separate robots dance over the top of the patient with their powerful arms moving very quickly, yet they don’t crash and they’re able to deliver very small items from one arm to another,” said Brendan Visser, a surgeon at Stanford University in California who helped develop the Trauma Pod.

The team hopes to shrink the Trauma Pod and all its robots to a collapsible unit encased in a shell that can be carried on the back of a vehicle. Eventually the bed will act as an anaesthetist, using a robotic arm to insert intravenous lines and deliver drugs. (ANI)

Soon, ‘mini me’ robots that look and sound just like their owners!

London, Feb 11 (ANI): A Japanese company is offering to create doll that looks just like their customers, and can even talk like them.

Robotics firm Little Island is offering to create ‘mini me’ of clients with an in-built voice synthesizer to record their voice.

To create the ‘Look A Like’ doll, the company requires only a photograph of the subject and after six weeks they will send you a doll that looks exactly like you, reports the Sun.

The robot dolls are packed with state-of-the-art technology such as interactive touch switches, microphone, a camera, and multiple servo-motors for movement.

With the help of the voice synthesizer it can record the voice and then read back the latest reports as you. (ANI)

Soon, ‘mini me’ robots that look and sound just like their owners!

London, Feb 11 (ANI): A Japanese company is offering to create doll that looks just like their customers, and can even talk like them.

Robotics firm Little Island is offering to create ‘mini me’ of clients with an in-built voice synthesizer to record their voice.

To create the ‘Look A Like’ doll, the company requires only a photograph of the subject and after six weeks they will send you a doll that looks exactly like you, reports the Sun.

The robot dolls are packed with state-of-the-art technology such as interactive touch switches, microphone, a camera, and multiple servo-motors for movement.

With the help of the voice synthesizer it can record the voice and then read back the latest reports as you. (ANI)

Soon, stone cold robot soldiers that kill without remorse

Washington, Jan 5 (ANI): The face of war is all set to transform, with American armed robots predicted to patrol on the battle ground in a matter of few years, killing without any remorse.

According to a report in the Washington Post, this advancement in American military prowess is a fact that comes under Moore’s law.

Gordon Moore, a co-founder of Intel, noticed nearly half a century ago that computing power seemed to be doubling about every two years.

The rapid emergence of the armed unmanned air vehicles (UAVs) that roam over Pakistan is considered by experts to be a sequel to Moore’s Law.

Technological advancements include onboard computers becoming far more powerful, so automatic pilots became far more competent.

Also, signal processors became more sophisticated, facilitating collection and processing of more interesting intelligence.

Global Positioning System receivers shrank and could be economically employed on small robotic aircraft. Precision-guided munitions could deliver lethal firepower.

Now, the Army stands on the threshold of one of the greatest transformations in war-fighting history, on the short list with steel and gunpowder.

The Future Combat Systems program is aimed at developing an array of new vehicles and systems – including armed robots.

Though the robots of past science fiction were governed by Isaac Asimov’s three Laws, which precluded bringing harm to humans, the real robots of the future will be different.

Within a decade, the Army will field armed robots with intellects that possess, as H.G. Wells put it, “minds that are to our minds as ours are to those of the beasts that perish, intellects vast and cool and unsympathetic.”

In short, the robot soldiers of the future will be utterly without remorse or pity when confronting the enemy.

According to the report, armed robots will all be snipers.

They will aim with inhuman precision and fire without human hesitation. Commanders will order them onto battlefields that would mean certain death for humans.

No human army could withstand such an onslaught. Such an adversary would present the enemy with the simple choice of martyrdom or flight.

These stone cold robot killers will not need bonuses to enlist or housing for their families or expensive training ranges or retirement payments. (ANI)