MIT News – Artificial intelligence Let’s say you want to train a robot so it understands how to use tools and can then quickly learn to make repairs around your house with a hammer, wrench, and screwdriver. To do that, you would need an enormous amount of data demonstrating tool use.Existing robotic datasets vary widely […]Continue reading

MIT News – Artificial intelligence Imagine a slime-like robot that can seamlessly change its shape to squeeze through narrow spaces, which could be deployed inside the human body to remove an unwanted item.While such a robot does not yet exist outside a laboratory, researchers are working to develop reconfigurable soft robots for applications in health […]Continue reading

Psychology Today: The Latest In science fiction, from “I Robot” to “Star Trek,” eventually, the question comes up: “Are robots people?” AI humanoid robots are coming. Are we ready? Go to Source 25/04/2024 – 21:03 /Jeffrey N Pickens Ph.D. Twitter: @hoffeldtcom

MIT News – Artificial intelligence “As a child, I wished for a robot that would explain others’ emotions to me” says Sharifa Alghowinem, a research scientist in the Media Lab’s Personal Robots Group (PRG). Growing up in Saudi Arabia, Alghowinem says she dreamed of coming to MIT one day to develop Arabic-based technologies, and of […]Continue reading

MIT News – Artificial intelligence Imagine purchasing a robot to perform household tasks. This robot was built and trained in a factory on a certain set of tasks and has never seen the items in your home. When you ask it to pick up a mug from your kitchen table, it might not recognize your […]Continue reading

MIT News – Artificial intelligence Your brand new household robot is delivered to your house, and you ask it to make you a cup of coffee. Although it knows some basic skills from previous practice in simulated kitchens, there are way too many actions it could possibly take — turning on the faucet, flushing the […]Continue reading

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