Robot Future?

Japan is Planning a Robot Future

By Heidi Adams, published Mar 24, 2008
Published Content: 107  Total Views: 134,845  Favorited By: 6 CPs
Rating: 3.0 of 5
With movies such as I-Robot, displaying the dark side of artificial intelligence it is no wonder that the average person is somewhat skeptical of a robot future. However, some cultures actually believe that the future will be a robotic society of humanoid robots interacting with humans in a cohesive nature. Japan is paving the way for a robot future. With the ever increasing population in Japan and the rise in a need for elderly care, Japan is looking to a robot future. At a university lab in Tokyo, Japan a robot is being developed by engineering students that can respond to trigger words such as war and love with appropriate emotional facial expressions. This humanoid robot can smile, grimace, show disgust, and fear based on certain trigger words. This may seem like something you would see out of a SciFi magazine or something from a Twilight episode, but it is in fact very real. Japan is currently leading the robotic revolution. Every home in Japan has an electric toilet and you can even see robots working in public as tea servers and vacuuming the lobbies of some of Japan's hotels. Japan already employs over 370,000 robots in it's factories. However, not all robots in development are humanoid, some are even animal like and furry-developed to comfort and offer companionship for the elderly and have the capability to blink their eyes, wiggle their feet or flippers. The most elite form of robot is the the assisted living robot. Assisted living robots have been under design for over twenty years. The ultimate goal for robotics engineers is to develop a robot that can interact with humans on an emotional level, respond to their needs, and adapt to any given environment.

Honda currently has an assisted living robot in development that they have named "Asimo". This Asimo robot can adapt its speed from a walk to a run, adjust its hand grip if its hand is being held, walk up and down stairs, and even sense danger on roadways. Honda is taking this revolutionary robot to the next phase of development and hopes to have a fully interactive specimen ready to market in the near future as an assisted living companion.

Comments
Showing Comment 1 of 1
 
 
Wild to think about...good article.

Posted on 04/04/2008 at 10:04:28 AM

Type in Your Comments Below - (1000 characters left)
Your name:

Submit your own content on this or any topic. Get started »
Showing Comment 1 of 1
 
Most Commented On