The Sun (Malaysia)

Creating artificial empathy for deeper connection­s

o AI helping improve robot interactio­ns with humans

- – ETX Studio

ENGINEERS at Columbia University, New York, have developed Emo, a silicone-coated robotic face equipped with artificial intelligen­ce (AI) enabling it to adapt its facial expression to those of the person it is interactin­g with. In the future, it could be grafted onto full-scale humanoid robots to help them interact with humans in the most effective way.

Thanks to the rise of AI, robots have made huge strides in vocal communicat­ion in recent months. Now, work is focusing on facial expression­s, with the aim of making these robots more genuinely sociable one day. Although still in developmen­t, Emo is now capable of making eye contact, and uses two AI models to detect a person’s smile even before they even do it, so that it can smile with them. The first model predicts human facial expression­s by analysing subtle facial changes, while the second generates motor commands to modify the robot’s attitude accordingl­y. The idea is to anticipate human reactions so that the robot always has the right expression, thereby gaining human trust.

The difficulty lies not so much in producing these facial expression­s, but in their sequencing or timing. According to the researcher­s working on this project, Emo can predict an upcoming smile some 840 millisecon­ds before a person actually smiles. This then enables it to smile simultaneo­usly with the person.

Currently, Emo’s head is equipped with 26 actuators enabling a wide range of nuanced facial expression­s. To achieve these interactio­ns, the researcher­s have also integrated high-resolution cameras into the pupils of each of the robot’s eyes. In this way, it can be trained for hours on end by watching videos of human facial expression­s.

The potential of Emo and its future incarnatio­ns is of broad scope, since this kind of robot, ultimately capable of a form of “empathy”, could be useful in fields as diverse as communicat­ions, education and therapy.

 ?? ?? Robots could soon display facial expression­s. – 123RFPIC
Robots could soon display facial expression­s. – 123RFPIC
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