Robots with Emotions on Display at the ICT'08 Event in Lyon

Dr Lola Cañamero, of the University of Hertfordshire’s School of Computer Science, is co-ordinating a European project which is developing robots that are capable of growing emotionally, responding to humans and of expressing their own emotional states as they interact with people.

Prototypes of some of these robots showing mid-term project results will be exhibited at ICT 2008, Europe's leading information and communication technologies event, which will take place in Lyon from 25-27 November 2008.

The project, FEELIX GROWING (FEEL, Interact, eXpress: a Global approach to development With Interdisciplinary Grounding; (http://www.feelix-growing.org), funded by the Sixth Framework Programme of the European Commission, aims to develop autonomous robots which will be capable of interacting with humans in everyday environments, and will learn and develop emotionally, socially and cognitively in accordance with the needs and personalities of the individuals with which they associate.

“The aim is to develop robots that grow up and adapt to humans in
everyday environments,” said Dr Cañamero. “If robots are to be truly
integrated in humans’ everyday lives as companions or carers, they cannot
be just taken off the shelf and put into a real-life setting, they need
to live and grow interacting with humans, to adapt to their environment.”
At ICT 2008, Dr Cañamero and the project’s international team of researchers will explain and demonstrate this approach using live interactive demonstrations and videos. Live demonstrations will include a baby pet robot learning to control its stress as it explores a new environment helped by a human caregiver, several robotic heads that show facial emotional responses to humans’ faces and voices, humanoid robots that learn to execute simple tasks by observing and imitating humans, and an interactive floor that responds to human touch and movement with different light and sound patterns. Videos and demonstrations will also show how non-human primates (chimpanzees) react to some of these robots.
The other players in the FEELIX GROWING project are: Centre National de
la Recherche Scientifique, France; Université de Cergy Pontoise, France;
Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne, Switzerland; University of
Portsmouth, UK; Institute of Communication and Computer Systems, Greece;
Entertainment Robotics, Denmark; and SAS Aldebaran Robotics, France.

Media Contact

Emma Roberts alfa

More Information:

http://www.herts.ac.uk

All latest news from the category: Trade Fair News

Back to home

Comments (0)

Write a comment

Newest articles

More efficient car designs with AI

8,000 open source models for sustainable mobility. Designing new cars is expensive and time consuming. As a result, manufacturers tend to make only minor changes from one model generation to…

The new Polarstern: Contract for new German research icebreaker awarded

Good news for the German research fleet, German shipbuilding, and international polar research alike: the new Polarstern will be constructed in Wismar by thyssenkrupp Marine Systems. The company received the…

Colored nuclei reveal cellular key genes

The identification of genes involved in diseases is one of the major challenges of biomedical research. Researchers at the University of Bonn and the University Hospital Bonn (UKB) have developed…