These non-humanoid robots express emotion by reacting to physical touch, just like plants do!





Most often, we only see plants moving and growing when they’re filmed in slow-motion for nature documentaries. But even in those slow scenes, watching plants bloom and grow into themselves feels emotional. It’s like watching a baby tiger wake up from a cat nap on the big screen, except it doesn’t have a face and it’s green, not furry. Inspired by the growth cycle and emotive movement of plant life, student designer Keunwook Kim designed Post-Plant, a collection of non-humanoid robots that respond to and move through non-verbal, physical interaction.

Following a period of researching how humans can read emotion from non-verbal cues, Kim gathered that arousal (dynamic energy), valence (intrinsic attractiveness), and stance (visual disposition) can each be interpreted as signs for emotional analysis. Applying this information to Post-Plant, Kim’s non-humanoid robots do not express emotion through facial expression, but through movement and changing forms. Built into each one of his Post-Plant robots, Kim incorporated a motor interface that combines an input and output system, registering when the robot is touched and responding with movement.

For example, when the top of Kim’s green robot, which could also be an interpretation of Maypole dancing from Midsommar, is turned, the robot responds with arousal, by spinning its ‘leaves.’ Signaling when its valence is turning negative, the Post-Plant robot binds its leaves tightly together. Once those leaves are touched by a human, the robot spins its leaves out once more, indicating a changed, positive valence. Similarly, Post-Plant’s white robot spins its propeller-like leaves in response to being touched but shivers to express unhappiness, indicating a need to be touched once more. By studying how humans read emotion, Kim hopes to cultivate the emotional relationship we have with robots and the potential to express a robot’s emotion through non-humanoid, kinetic gestures.

Designer: Keunwook Kim

Keunwook Kim built three different non-humanoid robots resembling various forms of plant life.

Taking cues from nature, Keunwook Kim researched the different ways humans can read emotion through non-human gestures.

When expressing happiness, this robot spins out its leaves, binding them together to express a negative valence.

This robot spins its propeller-like leaves to express happiness, shivering to express the opposite.

To express happiness, the single electrical string that flows through this robot stands erect.

When unhappy, the string falls limp.

A built-in motor translates input and output information acquired via touch to respond with movement.

To express positive valence, this Post-Plant robot rotates freely.

Spinning its propeller, this robot expresses general contentedness.

Inspired by everyday objects familiar to humans, Kim conceived the form of his non-humanoid robots.

Following multiple iterations, Kim felt inspired by plant life to build the bodies of his robots.

The leaves of this robot seem to be constructed from leather bands.

This tiny robot can walk for hours and is fuelled by methanol – no batteries required!

When designing small robots, the challenge is always about how to power them while being sustainable. Most designers will try to find alternatives to electric power because that means removing a battery that takes up space and adds weight – both things not conducive for a small robot. However, RoBeetle is finally here to take one small step for beetles but a giant leap for small robots! This tiny robot is actually powered by methanol – no batteries needed!

The body of the RoBeetle is actually the fuel tank, it gets filled with methanol and it weighs just 88 milligrams! The tiny robot has four legs – the rear legs are fixed and the front legs are attached to a transmission. The transmission is connected to a leaf spring-tensioned in a way that pulls the legs backward – the reason it was designed this way is that it helps the RoBeetle stand upright when it is not in motion. The actuator used inside is a nickel-titanium shape-memory (SMA) alloy which is basically a platinum-coated wire that gets longer when it heats up and shrinks when it cools down. The structural design of the robot is created in a way that it can modulate the flow of methanol using a purely mechanical system. The little horns of RoBeetle are actually hooks that help it carry small things.

“The way that the sliding vent is attached to the transmission is the really clever bit about this robot because it means that the motion of the wire itself is used to modulate the flow of fuel through a purely mechanical system. Essentially, it’s an actuator and a sensor at the same time,” says the team. A fun fact for you: RoBeetle’s speed can be increased by a gentle breeze because the air moving over the SMA wire cools it down a bit faster while also blowing away any residual methanol from around the vents, shutting down the reaction more completely. The little robot can carry more than its own body weight in fuel (so more than a gram) and it essentially takes 155 minutes for a full tank of methanol to completely evaporate. While this is a great step in developing small robots and robotic fuel, there are still some cons about RoBeetle that future creators and developers should take into account when trying to find solutions. For starters, it can only move forwards, not backward, and it can’t steer. The speed can’t be adjusted or controlled and it’ll walk until it either breaks or runs out of fuel.

The actuation cycle is what makes the robot walk and it starts with a full fuel tank and a cold SMA wire. The platinum coating of this wire facilitates a reaction between the methanol fuel and oxygen in the air which then generates a couple of water molecules and carbon dioxide along with heat. The coating of the wire is crucial because it creates a larger surface area for the platinum to interact with as much methanol as possible. It only takes a second or two for the SMA wire’s temperature to rise from 50 to 100 degrees Celsius once the reaction starts. Every punctuation of this cycle makes the robot moves forward by 1.2 millimeters and the top speed for it is 0.76 millimeters per second. This is only the beginning of creating smaller, more efficiently powered robots! Can someone Photoshop four of these RoBeetles on a crosswalk and make my day, please?

Designer: Nestor Perez-Arancibia, Xiufeng Yang, and Longlong Chang at the University of Southern California

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