Computer Vision

As promised yesterday, my discussion with Heather Knight of Marilyn Monrobot. I’d like to thank Heather for taking the time to speak with us after the Dr. Ishiguro’s lecture. We hope you enjoy the interview below.

Eric Wind: How’d you come to speak at the lecture tonight?

Heather Knight: I was invited to come speak at the lecture. There aren’t that many roboticists in New York City and I’m not sure whether they found me or whether [Erico Guizzo] recommended me because of our common interest in robots and theater.

E: What part of the conversation did you find the most intriuging and most beneficial for the audience?

H: That’s a good question. It’s always interesting to speak to a general public crowd. This was a real interesting evening because you had the Japanese Cultural Society and then the people interested in robots coming. It prompts a more cultural discussion to begin with, because you’re in New York City at this, you know, Japanese house of culture. So, having an American roboticist and a Japanese roboticist, we both have similar research interests in that we think social robots are really important and we want to make these robot companion type situations. Although, I would say that I want robots to bring people to connect, rather than being the connection.

He and I both have a strong interest in theater and thinking about algorithims we can learn from directors, actors that are codified a little bit differently than psychologists. Though, psychology is a field which social robotics adopts methodology from. So, we have a lot of similar interests, but we’re also very different, so it was fun.

You know, he’s a lot more experienced than I am. Hiroshi Ishiguro has been working on robotics for several decades and has a very established lab in Japan. I’ve been working on robots for 11 years, and it’s not like I haven’t done anything, but he’s been a huge inspiration for me and it was really exciting to be able to be in that situation.

E: When did you first hear about his work?

H: Well, it’s been at least 7 or 8 years ago. I started doing social robotics when I was an undergrad at MIT and working with a professor named Cynthia Breazeal. She made this robot for her PhD called Kismet, that was basically a head that had ears and eyes. It wasn’t trying to be a super-humanoid, it was almost creature like. It didn’t use words, but it kind of babbled. It responded to the tone of your voice. Sometimes it would be in the mood to play with toys or color-saturated objects, or sometimes it would be in the mood to socialize. I think one of the more clever aspects of it’s behavior system is that it would get bored. So, if you weren’t being interesting then it would switch to wanting to play with toys, which seems really human. It’s a really simple set of behaviors. But anyone could walk up to this robot without any training and learn how to interact, because it would be like “Hello!” and it’s ears would perk up, or if you said “You’ve been a very bad robot!” it would make a sad face or something.

So, it’s responding with sound. With these facial expressions that are perhaps a little cartoon like, but not fully human but still relateable. I think it’s really compelling to think about the simplest ways to come up with human like robots. That’s often the most difficult thing to do. As an engineer, it’s always more difficult to have a simple solution that’s very clever, than it is to have a convoluted Rube Goldberg machine to making breakfast or something.

E: Could you expand on your background a bit more?

H: Sure. I have a Bachelors and a Masters in Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, and now I’m working on a PhD in Robotics. So, you might think I’ve been in school for the last 15 years but actually I do other things along the way. I’ve taken breaks to travel and do other things, but I got a chance to work at the [NASA] Jet Propulsion Laboratory in California on space stuff. While I was there, I met people who were working in art and technology, and who I ended up collaborating with.

Originally, I was in SyynLabs, we were building installations for events. For example, you’d have a projection wall where people would come up to and dance, and things would fall on them and roll off their shadow. It was these installations that are in an event setting that would get people talking to each other. So it’s that technology that is fun and playful, and when we started building other things, like a bicycle-powered blender or, I don’t know, we had this one installation where you had to create a human circuit to hear a story — so, if you wanted to hear the full story, you needed to have a group of, like, 10 strangers holding hands. You’re using technology to trick people into spending time with each other. We used to call it “technological inebriation.”

It was really technology for people, and I think that’s a great metaphor for some of the robots I want to make. I don’t want to make robots for the sake of replacing people, or, I don’t know, for their own good. I think you can use robotics in these interactive art pieces to bring out features in ourselves or connect us to each other. Like, there’s autism therapy applications, where kids with autism feel more comfortable talking to robots than people because it’s less overwhelming — less sensory overload. If they practiced with this robot, this kind of stepping-stone agent, then they could better integrate generally, or get used to those more useless but still socially important aspects of interaction.

E: What was your Masters thesis on?

H: I did my Masters thesis on this project called the Huggable. It was this robotic teddy bear that had a fully body sensing skin. I was trying to come up with a way to make that sense happen in real time, so it could react naturally. It’s like if you were to pick up something, like a puppy or a baby. So, how do we communicate with puppies and babies? You pet them, hold them or you might tickle them. If they’re asleep, you pat them to wake them up. All of that communication that is happening is very complex. Anyone who has a small child or has played with a small child, they could tell you that the child knows what they want, but it’s not verbal. So how can you create pre-verbal interactions?

My thesis was on what kind of touch gestures do we use to communicate with this robot teddy bear. This involved human studies which included an audio puppeteer. So, if someone was pretending to be the robot, it sees the video and it’s natrually reacting and its sensors are trying to determine how people are communicating with it.
Basically, I get this data corpus to see how people use touch to communicate. It becomes a pattern recognition problem, where you have to categorize how people use touch and then you have to think about “how can I detect this?” Since I was trying to build a system that would work in real-time, one of the things I discovered is with touch, you don’t need really fine tuned sensing. As long as you cover an area that is two by three inches, you’re going to capture most communication. You don’t need a really fine grid.

The second thing is most touch lasts one to five seconds, so the connection doesn’t need to be particularly quick. Within that, you need to do some frequency analysis. For example, tickling is a very noisy signal. It involves a lot of different signals. Petting is more of a regular sine wave. Then, you can see how you differentiate between these different kinds of touch.

My degree was in Electrical Engineering, so it was designing the sensor system but it was also coming up with a simple pattern recognition system.

E: What’s your doctoral thesis, and how’s the progress?

H: I haven’t declared my thesis yet. I have finished my coursework, and I’m in the prep for that. Then we have qualifiers and so on, and I’m in the very final stage of my qualifiers. I will complete those this semester and hopefully put forth my proposal in the fall.

E: Do you have any idea of what your thesis proposal will be?

H: Yeah, so I learned that you’re not supposed to propose until you’ve already finished some of the work. That way, you’re not proposing something you’ve never done but you’re proposing something you’ve already tried out, so you know it has a chance of working.

People usually propose when they have 20 – 40% of the work done, in our department. I’m hoping it’s going to be about expressive motion. Basically, how can the non-anthropomorphic be expressive. I’m interested in how motion can describe the state of a relationship; “Do I know you?” “Do I not know you?” “Do I like or dislike you?” “Are you my boss, or am I your boss?” Power relationships are important. Then there can be room for emotions. Or, something else that’s interesting, is trying to measure how much a robot is in a rush by how quickly it’s going. We can see that with drivers and cars now. It’s just a question of whether we can categorize that in a general way.

I might get better at my elevator pitch in a couple of years, but the basic idea is to see if there are some universals of expression that we can distill to use on non-anthropomorphic robots. It’s basically robot body language.

E: What got you interested in robotics?

H: I didn’t grow up obsessed with robots. I fell in love with robots when I started building them. So, I went home in my Freshman year at MIT, and I was talking to people in my living group and I was asking about an internship. Someone said, “Hey! I work in a robotics lab. I could probably get you a position.”

So, I just started working there, January — maybe 2002. Over the summer, it was the first year my professor, Cynthia Breazeal, was a professor, and we had this big group project to kick off our research group. We built this big interactive terrarium and brought it to a big conference in San Antonio, and we were in the emerging technologies exhibit. You know, it was kind of like Epcot center. There was this big robot that had this hand-thing that would see people, say “Hello!” and then it would get bored and then go play in the waterfall, then it would get tired and turn in for the night in this cave. We went really crazy. There were these rock crystals that would turn on, and these drums you could play with, and these fiber optic tube worms that I got to put together. I was 18 and it was awesome. By the end of the 5 days, I could restart the whole system myself and I could talk to all these different people. It wasn’t just getting to build the robot and see it move, it was seeing people interact with the robots.

E: What do you feel that sets you apart from other roboticists?

H: I don’t know. I definitely have fun with what I do. My father was an engineer, and he would design propulsion systems for ships and submarines. He’s really great at math and physics. My mother was a Peace Corp volunteer, and all about international understanding, so she really wanted to impact the world.

I like building things and I like solving problems, and then my mother’s voice is in the back of my head saying “Well, why do people care about this?” I think that’s one of the reasons I didn’t want to do space stuff anymore. I wanted to impact real human beings. So, I don’t know how different that is but I really like imagining the future.

E: What’s your favorite project that you’ve worked on so far?

H: Well, if you asked what my favorite robot is, then I would be in really big trouble back at home if I didn’t say Data.

I don’t know, there have been so many projects I’ve been involved in in different ways. So, the precursor to the Rube Goldberg machine on Youtube is the OK Go music video. That was the project where I thought, “Oh my god, you could learn so much from professionals.” The band made that machine so much cooler than if we had built it by ourselves. They are professional entertainers and they have this intuition about what audiences care about and how to reach people. It’s part of the motivation I’ve gained in wanting to work with actors.

What I left out before, I want to work with actors, dancers, directors to help craft these expressive emotions that I’m trying to find universals for in robots. I’m really interested in seeing how we can adopt bodies of knowledge from theater into robotics. Or from disclipines of art that people have been spending hundreds or thousands of years honing. Rather than trying to reinvent the wheel as engineers, where we can make engines work, suddenly we’re trying to make these socially intelligent machines out there. Like, are engineers really the best people to be making socially intelligent machines? There’s some sort of weird clash there.

So, I’m trying to distill knowledge from a non-technical field into a world where you can program stuff. Some of that has been about creating interfaces where you can have kinetic conversations.

E: How would you explain social robotics and it’s significance to the average person?

H: Social robotics is the idea that you can make the human-robot interface smooth. So, instead of teaching you how to program the robot, you can just walk up to the robot and communicate and figure out the interface for it.

Social robotics is super-important if you ever want to have humans and robots working together that aren’t programmer-robot. Right now, we don’t really have that. We have tons of robots for industry manufacturing floors, to sort our mail, and we have sent them to the surface of Mars. But, to do every-day things with robots, we have to create an interface to make that possible.

E: What’s the idea Marilyn Monrobot labs and what drove you to start it?

H: I’m really interested in the intersection between robotics and theater. As much as I get to explore that as a researcher, I also think there is artistic value to that intersection. Marilyn Monrobot lets me explore that. So, it’s the umbrella name for our robot theater company. It’s where we do our robot-comedy stuff and the robot film festival. Last year, we did a robot cabaret variety show with 10 acts, exploring how the modern world is already a cyborg society because of our interdependence on phones. It’s allowed us to consider the changing ethical ramifications of our changing relationships with each other, via technology. Like, you hear about Freshmen who arrive at their new college and they have like 200 Facebook friends at their new college but they don’t know how to talk to someone at the orientation party. So, are we losing our humanity to technology? Obviously, I’m not a pessimist about technology but I think it’s equally naive not to think through where technology can go.

E: How did you decide on the name, Marilyn Monrobot?

H: Well, the JPL is really flat. You don’t really have parking garages in earthquake country, so instead we had this 20 minute walk from my office to the enormous parking lot. Of course, seniority is how you actually get close to your office, but since the average age there is 50-something and the average working-span is 30-years, we were kind of the kids. So it just kind of came to me walking through the parking lot.

I also found out later that Marilyn Monrobot was a Futurama episode, or it was a segment, which is fantastic. I didn’t know about that at the time. But, it’s supposed to represent this intersection between robotics and entertainment.

E: Could you tell us about the robot census and how that’s going?

H: So, the robot census started when I first arrived at Carnegie Mellon University. They do this thing where when you first arrive, you don’t know who your adviser is going to be but that is your most important relationship during your PhD. The average time for the degree is 5 and a half years, so some call it the marriage process. It’s longer than some marriages.

I was going to school and there were 500 other people working in robotics in some capacity, and we’re supposed to choose our adviser out of the 80-something professors. We didn’t even know who had what robot. Like, I’m at the Robotics Institute and, obviously I have to partially choose my advisers by what kind of robots they have, right? If this is our marriage, then they have children.

So, I started this census on campus and people thought it was interesting and I opened it up to the world. I think it should be done every four years, kind of like this other census you may have heard of that involves the population of the United States.

E: Is it difficult rounding up information for the robot census?

H: Yeah, even in person on campus. I think campuses should run their own censuses and collect information. We had to had out physical forms and then send links out to the digital form. It was like marketing. I had no idea, but you should feel okay sending up to ten reminders. But we didn’t do that, we went in person after a while. So, there were a few that probably slipped through the cracks but I’m sure that’s true of other censuses.

E: How many robots have you documented?

H: We’ve documented 547 robots on campus. There’s an off-campus facility for robotics, but we didn’t do the census there, though I would love to expand to that.

E: Do you feel that the anxiety people have could be attributable to the perceived lack of sociability of robots?

H: No, I think it’s religion. Fear of robots is a Western culture thing. It’s this idea that we’re usurping the role of God, and it’s kind of like Frankenstein because we’re doing what we should not be doing — you know, what we’re doing is wrong and we will be punished. It’s tapping into mythology.

Storytelling is a cultural phenomenon. It’s not based in reality. It’s based in human perception and culture and so on. So this idea that we’re not supposed to be playing God, and if we try to play God it will go really wrong, that’s a religious thing, in my opinion and others people’s opinion. This is well documented.

Now, if you look at the Shinto faith, they believe that all objects, people, animals, mountains, have the same spirit. There is no hierarchy. They have a really high value of nature, and rocks, and robots, so spiritually everything is on equal footing. The other detail that they have is that these spirits naturally want to be all in harmony. So, when you look at Frankenstein or the Terminator versus… Astroboy, that’s revealing our culture. It’s not about the technology; it’s about the belief system. Regardless of whether you were raised going to church or temple, this permeates our culture.
So, like even in Japan where a lot of people are Christian now, this Shinto belief system has permeated their expectations of what happens with technology.

E: Do you see the robotics industry trending toward social robotics?

H: It’s early research now, but I think charismatic machines have more applications in the short term. Social robotics may be a little longer. Like, the idea of Siri being really popular. That’s a charismatic technology. I think what we learn in social robotics can be cross-applied into real technology because what we’re doing is creating interfaces between technology and people. So, what we learn about sociability can be applied to non-social robot machines. Hiroshi would probably have a different opinion there.

E: What do you find is the biggest barrier in getting people interested in robotics? Do you think it’s exclusively religion or cultural?

H: When people don’t meet it and they’re just thinking theoretically about technology, then you get the Terminators and then you have the Singularity people. Those are like the two most popular mythmaking things at the moment. That doesn’t mean we don’t have positive storytelling. I mean, we have Rosie the Robot and we have Wall-E. I think stories really inspire what we make.

Throwing back to the previous conversation of robots in Japan, they invest so much in companion robots and music and things for the elderly, etc. And what is the U.S. known for in robotics innovation right now? The biggest is military robots. That doesn’t mean there’s not a lot of research in other kinds of robots, but what we’re famous for is military robots.

E: Do you have an end-goal for your research and projects?

H: Shape the future.

E: Are you concerned about people using your technology for negative instances?

H: I think it’s really important to think about that. I should think that would be a common part in engineering education in general, thinking through the ethics and where you’re going with stuff. I think in the world of art, and even architecture, critique is a natural part of the process. And it would be great if we would not only critique our designs based on needing to meet certain performance criteria, and the bigger grant organizations like the National Science Foundation, do ask for broader impact stuff, but they don’t really ask how things can be misused.

E: Do you think there’s a reason for that?

H: For me, and this is theoretical, engineers were never the heads of companies. They were the people who could help the people who started the companies solve specific problems. Historically, in this bigger company construct, our job is not to be creating ideas. These days, withink the last 30 years, engineers and technologists are starting companies and we are the idea people but the education hasn’t shifted. So, we’re still educated as if we are cogs in the larger industrial machine, whereas other people are thinking about “Where is this going?” Sometimes that’s about money but at least there was someone to think about that stuff. Maybe they had training in that, I don’t know.
But, I think it’s a legacy from engineers jobs before.

E: Kind of shifting gears, it seems like robotics, and technology in general, has drawn more men to the field than it has women. From your experience, do you feel that’s the case?

H: Well, I was spoiled because MIT is like 45% women. So, I didn’t really feel that way. When I worked, it was something like 1/3 women and 2/3 men ratio in the U.S. In Europe, it’s more like 9/10 male and 1/10 female.
I never really thought about it until I was several years into doing what I was doing. I always idolized my dad, so I kind of always felt like I wanted to be an engineer. I mean, there are definitely some legacy issues with gender, but things are moving in the right direction for sure. I think it’s much easier to change things at the undergraduate level, but it takes much longer for those changes to percolate into other levels of companies or academia. And you definitely get an idea of that, like, for example, I’m pregnant right now and CMU has no maternity leave policies. And I don’t know, academia just doesn’t think about those things sometimes.

E: Is there anything more that can be done to draw women into the field?

H: We’re actually doing a great job at attracting people, but we’re not doing so great at keeping people.

E: Why?

H: I think there are a lot of great articles about it. I think one of the titles of the articles is The Leaky Pipeline. I don’t know, people identify things like mentoring. It’s really important to have a good mentor, no matter what the gender is, according to research. Just having someone support you, whether you’re a minority, female or any other group that isn’t typically represented.

Since I’m really excited about a world where engineers aren’t just cogs in the machine, and that engineers really are creative, the more you move into that direction, the wider the breadth of people, whether it’s male or female. Just getting more creative people in the field and I would love to see that prioritized.

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On February 6, Dr. Hiroshi Ishiguro, Professor of Department of Systems Innovations at Osaka University, traveled to the Japan Society in New York City to give a lecture on the future prospects of humanoid robots — or androids. My wife, Jen, and I made the trip, as well.

The theater at the Japan Society was packed, and covered all ages. There was a bustling energy to the evening, and a slide featuring the Gemenoid-F android was projected prominently. The title on the slide was “Studies on Humanoids and Androids,” though the official title of the lecture was “How to Create Your Own Humanoid.” After everyone settled in, Dr. Ishiguro was introduced and he began.

He is a stately looking man and he did take a professorial stance at the podium. Through the lecture, he gave an overview of his work in android development and what he saw in its future. His talk was divided up in a manner of questions that, as a whole, asked if the line between human and robot would ever diminish. In so many words, the answer: it’s unlikely right now.

The Dr. came to explain that there are so many nuances in human behavior and speech that it would be incredibly difficult to create a robot that could act fully human. It’s a little akin to the Replicants in Blade Runner — “we” had created robots (“Replicants”) that could mimic humans in most ways, but that you could still tell, with a test, whether someone/something was human or Replicant. He even offered up a paradox; with robots, we can create the “perfect” human but then you can’t make a robot human.

He made this point through a number of examples, the most prominent is trying to agitate an android by repeated poking. Its behavior wouldn’t deviate accordingly. Humans have odd ways of reacting to stimuli that robots aren’t capable of. However, to illustrate the point that we can make, at least, “perfect” looking robots, he put up a video of a busy cafe and asked us to point out which one was the robot. I certainly couldn’t.

The unreality of robots aside, Dr. Ishiguro explained that his real motivation behind studying robots is human psychology. The example that stands out to me at this moment, is when he explained an experiment he did with one of his androids. While he was in Osaka, he directed some colleagues to plant an android in a cafeteria in Munich. From Osaka, he spoke through the robot and invited people to come, sit and speak with it. What he found was that people were more than willing to open up and spill about their problems. It was intriging, and I imagine people feel comfortable talking to the robot because of a perceived lack of judgement.

It’s examples like that which drew Dr. Ishiguro to robotics, rather than necessarily making the next big technological advance. With that, the lecture came to a close and the panel with Heather Knight, of Marilyn Monrobot, and Erico Guizzo, of IEEE Spectrum, began.

The panel was kicked off by a poem reading by the Gemenoid-F android, which was equal parts beautiful and creepy. After, Guizzo moderated the discussion between Knight and Dr. Ishiguro. The talk weaved between use of robots in theatrical settings and where social robotics is going. Knight explained her interest in robotics and using her robots in theatrical settings.

After the discussion, the floor opened up to questions. For a night that was dominated by non-technical subjects and trying to have robotics reach a wider audience, the questions were — somewhat disappointingly to me — mainly geared toward the technical aspects of the Gemenoid or the technical aspects of robotics.

Once the talk let out, there was a small reception. After it all wrapped up, we sat down with Heather Knight for a wide-ranging discussion. That interview will be posted up tomorrow.

Were you at the discussion, too? Let us know what your experience was on twitter @RobotCentral.

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Artificial Brains

FastCompany’s Lakshmi Sandhana looks at the path to an evolved robot that can walk naturally. The process has necessitated the development of artificial brains. Where we’re going with it all:

Grand dreams aside, what it means at present for the team is evolving brains that can go beyond figuring out simple things like gaits to more intelligent behaviors like learning. They’ve 3-D printed an advanced quadruped robot called Aracna, to further examine evolved gaits. The next step is to evolve larger, more modular brains that will hopefully approach natural brains in complexity opening up the possibility of creating an entirely new breed of robots.

“Evolutionary computation has already produced many things that are better than anything a human engineer has come up with, but its designs still pale in comparison to those found in nature,” states Clune. “As we begin to learn more about how nature produces its exquisite designs, the sky’s the limit: There’s no reason we cannot evolve robots as smart and capable as jaguars, hawks, and human beings.”

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Felix Salmon considers the ups of driverless cars, including the safety benefits:

If and when self-driving cars really start taking off, it’s easy to see where the road leads. Firstly, they probably won’t be operated on the owner-occupier model that we use for cars today, where we have to leave our cars parked for 97% of their lives just so that we know they’re going to be available for us when we need them. Given driverless cars’ ability to come pick you up whenever you need one, it makes much more sense to just join a network of such things, giving you the same ability to drive your car when you’re at home, or in a far-flung city, or whenever you might normally take a taxi. And the consequence of that is much less need for parking (right now there are more than three parking spots for every car), and therefore the freeing up of lots of space currently given over to parking spots.

Paul Krugman is on board:

By and large, I’m in the camp of those disillusioned about technology — mainly, I think, because the future isn’t what it used to be. A case in point is Herman Kahn’s The Year 2000, a 1967 exercise in forecasting that offered a convenient list of “very likely” technological developments. When 2000 actually did roll around, the striking thing was how over-optimistic the list was: Kahn foresaw most things that actually did happen, but also many things that didn’t (and still haven’t). And economic growth fell far short of his expectations.

But driverless cars break the pattern: even Kahn’s list of “less likely” possibilities only mentioned automated highways, not city streets, which is where we will apparently be in the quite near future.

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Chunka Mui, over at Forbes, begins a new series where he considers Google’s driverless car. He begins with a surprising fact:

In fact, the driverless car has broad implications for society, for the economy and for individual businesses. Just in the U.S., the car puts up for grab some $2 trillion a year in revenue and even more market cap.  It creates business opportunities that dwarf Google’s current search-based business and unleashes existential challenges to market leaders across numerous industries, including car makers, auto insurers, energy companies and others that share in car-related revenue.

The rest of the first installment gives a rundown of the broad changes we can expect with driverless car technology:

Google is claiming its car could save almost 30,000 lives each year on U.S. highways and prevent nearly 2 million additional injuries. Google claims it can reduce accident-related expenses by at least $400 billion a year in the U.S. Even if Google is way off—and I don’t believe it is—the improvement in safety will be startling.

In addition, the driverless car would reduce wasted commute time and energy by relieving congestion and allowing cars to go faster, operate closer together and choose more effective routes. One study estimated that traffic congestion wasted 4.8 billion hours and 1.9 billion gallons of fuel a year for urban Americans. That translates to $101 billion in lost productivity and added fuel costs.

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PopSci profiles DARPA’s Phoenix initative, the path to a robot that can effectively disassemble space junk:

Phoenix will need to be able to rendezvous in space with newly launched satellites, on which smaller “satlets” will hitch rides into orbit. Phoenix will then remove those satlets (without damaging whatever multimillion-dollar satellite they are riding on) and carry them to dead satellites in other orbits. It will then attach the new satlet–which carries the electronic brains of a new satellite–to the dead satellite’s antenna before severing the antenna from its now-defunct satellite body. The new satlet now has a perfectly good piece of legacy hardware it can use to communicate with ground stations or other satellites, and after placing it in the proper orbit the Phoenix vehicle can move on to its next salvage job.

 

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On Monday, I had the opportunity and pleasure to have a discussion with NASA’s Program Executive for Solar System Exploration, Dave Lavery. During the course of the conversation, Dave answered my questions on where robotic exploration stands within NASA, the mission objectives and future of the Mars rovers, his role in robotic education and more. The full interview is below.

Eric Wind: What’s your title at NASA and what do you do?

Dave Lavery: My official title is Program Executive for Solar System Exploration, and that basically means is that I’m the person at NASA who has full-time responsibilities for several of the Mars exploration missions. Several of us have that job; responsibilities for different missions.

How much information do you think we can get out of robots or rovers, or are we reaching the limit of what rovers are capable of doing?

I think there’s still an enormous amount that the rovers and robotic systems can do. Right now, realistically, given it’s the only option we have, at least for the time being, we intend to exercise them as much as we can. Certainly the rovers that are there now – the two that are still operating right now, the Opportunity and Curiosity – are both enormously capable and represent the best that we are able to put on the surface of the planet right now.

We still have plans on extending those capabilities further; making them more capable, more intelligent and more autonomous as much as we can until we eventually get to the point where we can put humans on the planet.

Having said that, are they as capable as any human being? No, not yet, far from it. But, they are much better than nothing at all, or waiting until we can put a human there which could be decades away.

What’s the role of people in space exploration currently? Is just building these rovers, or continuing ISS missions, or missions for the moon?

Well, right now, humans are obviously building and operating the systems that we’re sending to the planet. We do have humans occupying the International Space Station continuously.

In addition to that, in terms of where we’re going to next, whether it’s going to be to the moon or onto asteroids or onto Mars; all of that is wrapped up in a redefinition process that we’re going through to redetermine and refine our ongoing human exploration strategy. So, that is actually something that is very much in development right now and we hope to have the agencies overall structure and strategy within the next couple months.

What’s the next big thing for robotics and space exploration?

Well, in terms of hard space exploration we’re working on now, we just landed the Mars Curiosity rover just a few months ago and beginning its own explorations of Mars. I think we just announced over the holidays, that we’ll actually be building a second iteration of Curiosity which will be launched around 2020.

The intent is that we’ll build a rover that is Curiosity’s twin sister, if you will, with the main difference being different size payload on board. It will take advantage of everything Curiosity finds and teaches us, and use that knowledge to help us define science package which will answer the next set of questions that Curiosity will raise.

… → Read More

The New York Times profiles deep learning and the optimism surrounding the field:

Using an artificial intelligence technique inspired by theories about how the brain recognizes patterns, technology companies are reporting startling gains in fields as diverse as computer vision, speech recognition and the identification of promising new molecules for designing drugs.

The advances have led to widespread enthusiasm among researchers who design software to perform human activities like seeing, listening and thinking. They offer the promise of machines that converse with humans and perform tasks like driving cars and working in factories, raising the specter of automated robots that could replace human workers.

The technology, called deep learning, has already been put to use in services like Apple’s Siri virtual personal assistant, which is based on Nuance Communications’ speech recognition service, and in Google’s Street View, which uses machine vision to identify specific addresses.

An interesting side-note:

One of the most striking aspects of the research led by Dr. Hinton is that it has taken place largely without the patent restrictions and bitter infighting over intellectual property that characterize high-technology fields.

“We decided early on not to make money out of this, but just to sort of spread it to infect everybody,” he said. “These companies are terribly pleased with this.”

Imagineering A Dragon

Disney unveiled its new dragon. How it works:

The dragon is a variation on an ultralight aircraft, utilizing a fan and kite to stay afloat while an onboard pilot navigates it. According to The Bakersfield Californian, Disney intended to keep this test dragon a secret, requiring nondisclosure and confidentiality agreements to be signed by airport officials working with them. But it was still noticed, with local restaurant manager Tammy Zaninovich posting photos online (and subsequently shared by the Californian), noting that the dragon does more than fly – it “breaths fire and the mouth opens and closes.”

Aside from the dragon, Disney has been busy with other things in robotics. My favorite project:

 

Autom

Autom, a weight-loss coach, is our crowdfunding feature of the day. She’s a robot that helps you keep tabs on how well you diet, and she does so by being humanly and informed. The robot has been in development for the last five years, and it is now ready for mass manufacture. The developer, Dr. Cory Kidd, started the Indiegogo page so his company, Intuitive Automata, can ship Autom to dieters quicker.

… → Read More

NOVA ScienceNOW

On Wednesday night, NOVA ScienceNOW’s season finale showcased emerging technologies. In the three-segment show, there was a lot of David Pogue, The New York Times’ Technology writer, dramatically enthusing over different gadgets. Among the featured were the DARwIn robots playing soccer, the Google Glass and video games that you can control with your mind. Lightly intercut with the techno-gasms was some surface discussion about the ethical implications of these technologies, with MIT professor Sherry Turkle serving as a kind of spokeswoman for these views. While I could have used more of that discussion, it didn’t seem to be the point of the show – so no real complaints. It was an otherwise very engaging show and Pogue is an electric host. … → Read More

When Stanford University won the DARPA Grand Challenge in ’05 the team made clear their philosophy that autonomous navigation should be treated as a software problem.  While other teams spent their resources on building custom hardware, Dr. Sebastian Thrun simply sent his Stanford team’s Volkswagen Touareg off to get converted to drive-by-wire using proven and commoditized technologies.  When he got it back, all that was left was to plug in his computers and start coding.

Software is a cheap medium on which to try different things without fear of cutting something too big or too small or accidentally reversing the polarities of some highly sensitive and expensive electronic device.  No.  If something isn’t built correctly in software, you just open it up in an editor, fix it, and try it again.

And if you want to build a robot to interact in the world, you’re going to make it small.  If you’re going to make it small, you’re going to care about things like computing power and battery life and other technical excise tasks.  The solution to this is to utilize the substantial computing power on your desk.  When SPC-101C came out last year, I lauded the client-server architecture that delegated the substantial computing requirements to the host computer.  The robot plays a sensing and interacting role for the host computer and is what lets your omputer move about in the world.

Surveyor Corporation clearly gets all of this.

They just announced a computer vision platform called Surveyor Stereo Vision System (“SVS”) that sells for a paltry $550.  It’s designed to let developers and researchers get straight to the business of stereoscopic vision research.  ”We realize that in order to help accelerate the adoption of computer vision into the mainstream we have to remove the obstacles that hinder innovation. The last thing a computer vision developer wants to do is waste his time measuring voltage levels,” says Surveyor Corporation founder Howard Gordon.

Surveyor SVS’s straightforward approach can be explained in over-simplified terms as two socket streams sending video through a 802.11g radio.  This standard method of transmission allows for easy integration into lots of open source computer vision libraries including OpenCV.  To normal people, this just means that the disembodied cameras act like two high-end webcams that can do cool stuff like render the world in a 3D image you can see through red and blue glasses like the kind you wear at the movie theater.

Getting a pair of integrated cameras that can transmit video signals digitally throug 802.11g wireless protocols for $550 is impressive enough, but Surveyor SVS is also a complete mobile robot platform. “Surveyor is providing a great service to the industry by offering high-end technology at prices even a hobbyist can afford. I’m not quite sure how they pull it off, but I’m glad they do,” says Matt Trossen, founder and CEO of Trossen Robotics.

By comparison, Point Grey Research’s Bumblebee Stereoscopic camera sells for $1,500 and requires a firewire connection to a computer.

Disclosure:  Our affiliate sponsor Trossen Robotics sells Surveyor Corporation technology.

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