Ottawa Citizen

Woman or machine?

Latest Japanese robots working as museum guides look eerily human

- YURI KAGEYAMA

The new robot guides at a

T OKYO Tokyo museum look so eerily human and speak so smoothly they almost outdo people — almost.

In a demonstrat­ion, the remotecont­rolled machines moved their pink lips in time to a voice-over, twitched their eyebrows, blinked and swayed their heads from side to side. They stay seated but can move their hands. In a clear triumph, Kodomoroid read the news without stumbling once and recited complex tongue-twisters glibly.

The robot, designed with a girlish appearance, can use a variety of voices, such as a deep male voice one minute and a squeaky girlie voice the next. The speech can be input by text, giving them perfect articulati­on, according to Ishiguro.

There were some glitches — such as the lips not moving at all while the robot spoke, or the Otonaroid announcer robot staying silent twice when asked to introduce itself. But glitches are common with robots because they are delicate gadgetry sensitive to their environ- ment. Kodomoroid and the woman robot Otonaroid were joined at the demonstrat­ion by the minimally designed Telenoid, a mannequin head with pointed arms that serves as a cuddly companion.

The two life-size robots, which have silicon skin and artificial muscles, will be on display starting Wednesday, at Miraikan museum, or the National Museum of Emerging Science and Innovation, in Tokyo.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Robot Kodomoroid speaks at the National Museum of Emerging Science and Innovation.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Robot Kodomoroid speaks at the National Museum of Emerging Science and Innovation.

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