Tag Archives: robots

#437446 Can the voice of healthcare robots ...

Robots are gradually making their way into hospitals and other clinical facilities, providing basic assistance to doctors and patients. To facilitate their widespread use in health care settings, however, robotics researchers need to ensure that users feel at ease with robots and accept the help they can offer. This could potentially be achieved by developing robots that communicate in empathetic and compassionate ways. Continue reading

Posted in Human Robots

#437431 Brain activity reveals individual ...

The way humans interpret the behavior of AI-endowed artificial agents, such as humanoid robots, depends on specific individual attitudes that can be detected from neural activity. Researchers at IIT-Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia (Italian Institute of Technology) demonstrated that people's bias toward robots—that is, attributing intentionality or considering them as “mindless things”—can be correlated with distinct brain activity patterns. The research results have been published in Science Robotics and are important for understanding the way humans engage with robots, while also considering their acceptance in healthcare applications and daily life. Continue reading

Posted in Human Robots

#437420 PufferBot: A flying robot with an ...

Researchers at University of Colorado Boulder's ATLAS Institute and University of Calgary have recently developed an actuated, expandable structure that can be used to fabricate shape-changing aerial robots. In a paper set to be presented at the 2020 IEEE/RSJ International Conference on Intelligent Robotics and Systems (IROS), they introduced a new robot, dubbed PufferBot, which was built using this unique and innovative structure. Continue reading

Posted in Human Robots

#437402 Helping robots avoid collisions

George Konidaris still remembers his disheartening introduction to robotics. Continue reading

Posted in Human Robots

#437312 Exploring the interactions between ...

In recent years, researchers have developed a growing amount of computational techniques to enable human-like capabilities in robots. Most techniques developed so far, however, merely focus on artificially reproducing the senses of vision and touch, disregarding other senses, such as auditory perception. Continue reading

Posted in Human Robots