Spine-Chilling SociBot-Mini Wears Whatever Face You Want

SociBot-Mini

In John Woo’s Face/Off, the characters played by Nicholas Cage and John Travolta changed their faces to look like each other, but SociBot-Mini takes things even further, as it can assume any face its owners want it to.

Will Jackson of Engineered Arts, a firm based out of Penryn, UK, developed SociBot-Mini with the help of his colleagues. In the past, a lot of robotics companies went for a human-like design, and even though SociBot-Mini follows that trend, this robot does it in a hair-raising manner.

As Jackson explained, “Today’s computer interfaces have moved on very little from the typewriter. We have social software and a social Internet, but we don’t have social hardware.” With that in mind, he proceeded to creating a robot with a transparent plastic face, mouth, eyes and nose contours. The human-like face is emphasized by backlighting and is furthermore enhanced by a projector.

The 60-cm tall robot features a depth-sensing camera that makes it capable of capturing and recognizing gestures. Still, SociBot-Mini does more than just predicting your mood, as it can also estimate your age.

Even SociBot-Mini‘s developer admits that “It’s as spooky as all hell. We’ve tried it with a couple of our telecommuting colleagues in meetings and when it suddenly turns and joins in the conversation as our colleague Dan, and with his face, it is quite amazing. But you get used to it quickly.”

Tony Belpaeme, a researcher at Plymouth University in the UK, pointed out that SociBot-Mini might represent a gold mine for marketing firms: “Two dimensional video conferences are quite impoverished experiences. There is still something missing and so we prefer to meet real people. So the more you can bring that 2D experience into the 3D physical space the better the interaction will flow. Having a robot in which your face is projected, carrying all the right expressive signals, will provide an immensely strong presence, even though it will seem uncanny at first.”

Jackson plans to launch a campaign on Kickstarter, and there are plenty of spooky applications he could promote for SociBot-Mini, including trick-or-treating on Halloween, bringing people back from the other side by projecting their face on this robot, and creating the impression that long-distance partners are in the same room. These are only some of the creepy uses SociBot-Mini could have, but I’m sure that people would come with more ideas if this ever hits the market.

Be social! Follow Walyou on Facebook and Twitter, and read more related stories about the

NASA Valkyrie Robot for DARPA Competition Unveiled


DARPA issued a challenge to multiple teams a while back to challenge them to build robots that could perform a specific set of tasks. The contest was called the DARPA Robotics challenge and it has...
    






Disney Research Animatronic Robot Plays Catch and Juggles

attachment

What may be an unknown fact for some is that Disney is also involved in robotics. The latest creation of Disney Research is a robot that can juggle or play catch with a human opponent.

The possibility of such robots being seen in Disney movies should not be entirely neglected. However, ...
Continue Reading on Walyou

Samsung files patents for robot that mimics human walking and breathing, ratchets up the creepy factor

Samsung robot patent filings would mimic human walking and breathing, wouldn't eliminate the creepy factor

As much as Samsung is big on robots, it hasn't gone all-out on the idea until a just-published quartet of patent applications. The filings have a robot more directly mimicking a human walk and adjusting the scale to get the appropriate speed without the unnatural, perpetually bent gait of certain peers. To safely get from point A to point B, any path is chopped up into a series of walking motions, and the robot constantly checks against its center of gravity to stay upright as it walks uphill or down. All very clever, but we'd say Samsung is almost too fond of the uncanny valley: one patent has rotating joints coordinate to simulate the chest heaves of human breathing. We don't know if the company will ever put the patents to use; these could be just feverish dreams of one-upping Honda's ASIMO at its own game. But if it does, we could be looking at Samsung-made androids designed like humans rather than for them.

Samsung files patents for robot that mimics human walking and breathing, ratchets up the creepy factor originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 22 Jun 2012 02:14:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceUSPTO (1), (2), (3), (4)  | Email this | Comments

Mind-reading robotic teachers are more… Anyone? Anyone? Attention-grabbing

Mind-reading robotic teachers are more... Anyone? Anyone? Attention-grabbing

You'd have thought that replacing a human teacher with a swanky robot would be enough to keep the kids interested, but apparently not. The University of Wisconsin-Madison found that supplying a robot teacher didn't in itself max out concentration. In one trial, they put a Wakamaru robot instructor in the classroom with only mediocre results. But then they switched it out for a robot that could read students' EEG signals to tell when they were enjoying Matthew Broderick daydreams, and which could then change its intonation or wave its metallic hands in response. That second robot resulted in far better scores when the students were subsequently quizzed about their lessons, proving once again that teaching is about more than preaching.

Mind-reading robotic teachers are more... Anyone? Anyone? Attention-grabbing originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 30 May 2012 06:52:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceNew Scientist  | Email this | Comments