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Robots rule in engineering lab

"If I did not have a handsome face and two arms ... you would probably not be as inclined to interact with me," Brian the robot tells visitors to Professor Goldie Nejat's autonomous systems and biomechatronics lab.

While handsome may be overstating things a bit, Brian鈥檚 silicone rubber face and mechanical torso certainly draw a crowd eager to interact with him wherever he goes. After all, robot sightings are still rare in North America, unlike in Japan where they are regularly used on assembly lines.

鈥淥ur research area focuses on trying to incorporate robots into everyday life and integrate them into society in applications beyond the manufacturing floor,鈥 said Nejat, a professor.

鈥淲e spent a few years designing the platform. He鈥檚 humanlike from the waist up with similar actions and body language to humans; it鈥檚 humanlike, but you can pretty much tell it鈥檚 a robot; it doesn鈥檛 confuse anyone.鈥

That鈥檚 by design, of course. Studies have shown people are generally accepting of robots but Nejat and her team want to make his limitations clear. Their aim this year is to integrate Brian into a healthcare team at Baycrest in a nursing unit populated by seniors whose memories may need prompting. They鈥檙e hoping he鈥檒l become accepted by staff and patients alike.

鈥淲e鈥檙e focusing on how he communicates with people,鈥 Nejat said. 鈥淲e鈥檇 like him to interact where activities are involved to provide cognitive or social stimuli to individuals.鈥

At present, Brian can help people by providing daily reminders and also engaging a user in a simple memory card game but the design team would also like to see the robot help people accomplish a wide variety of daily tasks such as dressing and brushing their teeth or alerting the nurses when a patient is not feeling well. This requires his designers to gain an understanding of how humans communicate, both verbally and non-verbally, so they can program him to react accordingly.

鈥淓very year we add a new module to the robot,鈥 said Nejat. 鈥淲e have a camera for face detection and gaze tracking. Now, we want him to take in more information from the environment and the people in it so he can intelligently determine his assistive behaviour.

鈥淏y integrating different sensors we鈥檒l try to get him to understand human emotions from body language; that will determine his behaviour. We鈥檙e doing the same thing with voice, trying to get him to understand human speech.鈥

The entire effort is interdisciplinary, requiring a knowledge of mechatronics, artificial intelligence, mechanics, psychology and neuroscience, among other fields.

鈥淥ne of our main motivations was the aging baby boomers,鈥 Nejat said. 鈥淗e鈥檚 an assistive . Robots are not here to replace healthcare workers, they will work in a team with them to help provide care.鈥

Nejat and her graduate students, Jeanie Chan and Derek McColl, see Brian as a long-term project, able to take on new tasks and characteristics as necessary.

鈥淚n North America, we鈥檙e not used to these types of robots, so I hope we can use him as a prototype to show what robots are capable of doing in order to improve our quality of life.鈥

Provided by University of Toronto

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