Engineers built humanoid robots that can
recognize objects by color by processing information from a camera mounted on
the robot's head. The robots are programmed to play soccer, with the intention
of creating a team of fully autonomous humanoid robots able to compete against
a championship human team by 2050. They have also designed tiny robots to mimic
the communicative "waggle dance" of bees.
They're big ...
they're strong ... they're fast! Your favorite big screen robots may become a
reality.A world of robots may seem like something out of a movie, but it could
be closer to reality than you think. Engineers have created robotic soccer
players, bees and even a spider that will send chills up your spine just like
the real thing.
Powered by a small
battery on her back, humanoid robot Lola is a soccer champion.
"The idea of
the robot is that it can walk, it can see things because it has a video camera
on top," Raul Rojas, Ph.D., professor of artificial intelligence at Freie
University in Berlin, Germany, told Ivanhoe.
Using the camera
mounted on her head, Lola recognizes objects by color. The information from the
camera is then processed in this microchip, which activates different motors.
"And using
this camera it can locate objects on the floor for example a red ball, go after
the ball and try to score a goal," Dr. Rojas said. A robot with a few
tricks up her sleeve.
German engineers
have also created a bee robot. Covered with wax so it's not stung by others, it
mimics the 'waggle' dance -- a figure eight pattern for communicating the
location of food and water.
"Later what
we want to prove is that the robot can send the bees in any decided direction
using the waggle dance," Dr. Rojas said.
Robots like this
could one day become high-tech surveillance tools that secretly fly and record
data ... and a robot you probably won't want to see walking around anytime
soon? The spider-bot.
ABOUT ROBOTICS:
Robots are made of roughly the same components as human beings: a body
structure with moveable joints; a muscle system outfitted with motors and
actuators to move that body structure; a sensory system to collect information
from the surrounding environment; a power source to activate the body; and a
computer "brain" system to process sensory information and tell the
muscles what to do.
Robots are manmade machines intended to replicate human and
animal behavior. Roboticists can combine these basic elements with other
technological innovations to create some very complex robotic systems. There
are plenty of robots doing manual work on factory assembly lines, but while
those machines can manipulate objects, they do the same thing, along the same
path, every time. Other robots are designed to play soccer, or to drive
vehicles without human input.
ABOUT A.I.:
Robots and computer networks are always evolving intelligent consciousness in
popular science fiction. But while modern scientists have made great strides in
building computers that can mimic logical thought, they still haven't cracked
the code of human emotion and consciousness. There are two prevailing schools
of thought on artificial intelligence. Proponents of "strong AI"
consider that all human thought can be broken down into a set of mathematical
operations. They expect that they will one day be able to replicate the human
mind and create a robot capable of both thinking and feeling, with a sense of
self -- the stuff of classic science fiction. Think of the robot Number Five
from the 80s movie Short Circuit, who suddenly realized, frightened, that he
could be "disassembled" by the scientists who made him. "Weak
AI" proponents expect that human thought and emotion can only be simulated
by computers. A computer might seem intelligent, but it is not aware of what it
is doing, with no sense of self or consciousness.
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