Toyota looks to lend a helping robot hand
Automaker banking technology will prove useful to an aging Japanese population
Toyota is harbouring big ambitions to become a significant player in the growing market for robots that help the elderly and other people get around in everyday life.
The company believes it can use its manufacturing expertise to become as crucial in a field it calls “partner robots” as it is to auto-making. There are currently 150 robotics engineers at Toyota out of a worldwide staff of 300,000, but the company is plowing money into research and development.
Toyota last month announced a $1-billion investment in a research company headed by robotics expert Gill Pratt in Silicon Valley, Calif., to develop artificial intelligence and robotics. It is already working with Stanford University and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology on robotics.
“We are preparing for a future in which people may not be able to drive cars, or they may need artificial intelligence to support them to drive, and once they get off their cars they may need help from partner robots,” said Akifumi Tamaoki, general manager of Toyota’s partner robot division.
The Japanese government is banking on robotics as a growth industry in a society that’s aging at a faster pace than any other industrialized nation.
Other companies have jumped in, including Internet company Softbank, which is selling a humanoid that carries on simple conversations.
Speaking to The Associated Press at a Tokyo robot show this week, Tamaoki said Toyota’s robotics interests go back decades, including their use in manufacturing at its auto plants. But it now sees the technology as a viable business in its own right.
Some of that impetus comes from the focus of the auto and tech industries on using artificial intelligence to develop cars that can drive autonomously. Google is running driverless-vehicle trials and Nissan is especially confident about the technology, with plans to start selling such vehicles by 2020.
Honda was a leader in robots with Asimo, its walking and talking child-shaped robot, in development for more than two decades.
But critics say that effort got sidetracked by focusing too much on duplicating human movements and behaviour, and losing sight of trying to be useful.
Honda officials acknowledge the company went through some soul-searching after being the target of public criticism when Asimo could do nothing to help people after the March, 2011 nuclear disaster in Japan.
Toyota demonstrated a onearmed partner robot-on-wheels loaded with sensors and cameras earlier this year. The R2-D2 look-alike, known as HSR, or Human Support Robot, can pick up after people, bring an item to the bedside or open curtains.
The robot, an improved version of a model first shown in 2012, is not yet ready for commercial sale. Toyota is collaborating with 10 universities in Japan, with plans to extend that to overseas academic organizations next year, to develop practical uses, Tamaoki said. He believes robots like HSR will gradually become widespread, although that may take another decade.
Among the developments in the works for HSR is adding another arm and conversational skills.