Robot Learns When shown - Replicates body movements - Listens to voice commands.- Taught like baby to perform tasks.
Sabina, A Robot Domestic Learns When You Show Her
By News Staff | April 2nd 2015 07:00 AM
In the 1942 short story "Runaround", author
Isaac Asimov came up with Three Laws of Robotics and those fictional ethics
have captivated engineers ever since.
Maintaining the spirit of Asimov, Dr. Eduardo Morales
Manzanares of the National Institute of Astrophysics, Optics and Electronics
(INAOE) in Mexico has developed robots with artificial intelligence that don’t
require specialized personnel to be controlled.
Instead, software allows the robot named Sabina to be
able to learn with the guide of the user, either through a remote control or through
voice commands or simply by showing the automaton tasks, as one would teach a
toddler. That means anyone can program it without being an expert in robotics.
Sabina can autonomously be taught to perform various
tasks, like bringing the user’s favorite drink or some medicine. The learning
mechanism is independent to the robot. The idea is to create a program that
acquires user information that can be used in different robots and improve to
where it can teach a drone or helicopter to do reconnaissance.
To do that, certain sensory capabilities are needed,
interpretive programs to represent the observed and software to understand
simple voice commands. To complement its learning, Sabina has laser sensors, an
Xbox Kinect, which is an open technology that consists of a depth camera that
captures 3D information, which allows to identify individuals and their
position.
For example, the user can move its arm and the robot will
replicate the movement, perceiving body language and thus learning to perform
tasks. The voice commands can be in Spanish or English.
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