Everyone knows robots
are cool and useful, but they can also be creepy. Part of the reason
is, even if the robot has a reasonable facsimile of the human face, they
tend to be cool to the touch, sometimes even harsh. Now one Canadian
engineer is designing a way for robots to not just mimic the expressions
of humans but also simulate their warm skin.
Emil Petriu of the University of Ottawa decided to look to biology
rather than robotics when he set out to build his life-like android. The
most important part is a biology-inspired artificial skin, which has
sensors that not only sense contact but can also discern temperature and
the elasticity of the surface. So if the sensor detects it’s touching
something 98.6 degrees Fahrenheit and soft, then it’s probably a person,
and the robot can react accordingly.
On the other side of the touch, the human will feel a warm and soft
surface as well, thanks to tubes within the artificial skin that
circulate hot water. Also part of the design: an anatomically correct
simulation of a human skull, which moves realistically thanks to an
elaborate set of artificial motors and a spring-loaded jaw. The skull
will be covered in the elastic skin, with the aimed result to create a
life-like face.
Petriu’s method is novel: He’s starting with a bulky, mechanical bot
and replacing its parts, one by one, with more human-like appendages,
starting with the head and hands. The whole thing sounds a little like
transforming C-3PO from Star Wars into Data from Star Trek.
Petriu should proceed with caution, however, if research into
human-robot interactions is any indication. There have been many
human-resembling robots created (mainly in Japan), and a recurring
problem is that humans respond better to robots the more life-like they
are — to a point. Once the android starts to closely resemble an actual
person, humans respond negatively, apparently because they start to
notice the robot’s subtle differences from a person (lack of body
language, for one) more than its similarities. The phenomenon is known
as the “uncanny valley” (seen below).
“Our society is becoming more and more disconnected,” he says. “We are, after all, still social beings.”
Do you think the idea of an android companion that keeps you company
while you chat with friends on Facebook and Google+ has merit? Maybe the
robot could even be tied into those services somehow, providing a kind
of avatar for the people you connect with.
What other possibilities are there? Get creative in the comments.
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