Wired UK: Humanoid robots to gain advanced social skills
A pan-European team of robotics researchers began a project this year that could see humanoid bots interact with groups of people in a realistic, anthropomorphic way, for the first time.
The “Humanoids with auditory and visual abilities in populated spaces” (HUMAVIPS) project has the ambitious goal of making humanoid bots just that bit more human by building algorithms that will enable bots to mimic what psychologists call the “cocktail party effect” -– the human ability to focus attention on just one person in the midst of other people, voices and background noise.
If successful, HUMAVIPS will give future humanoid bots something that existing bots don’t possess -– the simple social skills necessary to deal with small groups of people, including the basic intelligence to pick out a group of humans and determine which ones want to interact with it. It could also endow bots with the ability to infer meaning from incoming sense data, which would be a rudimentary step towards truly anthropomorphic robot intelligence.
Led by Radu Horaud, Director of Research at INRIA, the three-year project, which has attracted 2.6m euros in European Commission funding, builds on the POP project (see Wired’s December report), which provided proof-of-concept for the idea that combining auditory and visual information improves a bot’s ability to pick identify human speakers in the midst of background noise.
Read more about HUMAVIPS here.
Worldwide Robot Population Increase

The IFR Statistical Department publishes an annual study called “World Robotics,” that carries an array of global statistics about both industrial and service robots.
The latest version –World Robotics 2008– was published last month and the figures make for interesting reading. Given that we’ve been looking at domestic robots in recent posts, I thought the following figures related to “service robots for personal and private use” were worth sharing: (more…)
To Be Or Not To Be (Humanoid), Part II: Christopher Parlitz Responds
Christopher Parlitz, the project leader behind the Care-O-Bot kindly replied to our query regarding the not-so-humanoid appearance of the Care-O-Bot today. (more…)

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