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    Robots Learn By Doing Improv

    Your household robot won't just clean and make repairs, it will come up with clever, novel solutions to problems by improvising. This hallmark of artificial intelligence is a little closer to reality thanks to a robot named Kurt3D. In a recent test, Kurt3D figured out how to activate a switch and open a door by improvising, using a limited set of instructions. The key to this A.I. breakthrough is a new way of teaching computers about objects by teaching them what something is for rather than simply what it is.



    A great deal of A.I. research has focused on teaching computers to identify lists of objects and people. The Multi-sensory Autonomous Cognitive Systems (MACS) project uses a different paradigm - affordance learning. Instead of identifying a specific object as a hammer, an affordance-based system learns the parameters of what makes a hammer useful for hammering. It needs a shaft for leverage, a weight at the end and a flat surface for hammering. Then, if the robot needs to find something with which to hammer, it wouldn't be limited by a narrow visual recognition algorithm for a hammer. It could search for any object suitable for the purpose.

    The only given parameters in the Kurt3D test stated that a door switch could be activated by placing a certain weight on a pressure sensitive plate. Kurt3D was able to examine the room, identify an appropriate object, pick it up, place it on the plate, and move through the open door. Photo by: Fraunhofer AIS.

    What Can I, Robot, Do With That? [Science Daily]


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