The Korea Times

Meet robot dog enforcing social distancing in Singapore

-

Leaves crunch underfoot as Spot marches through the park, back straight as a tabletop, stride brisk as a soldier’s.

A grassy field encircled by trees beckons. But Spot is focused on the asphalt path ahead, where a few joggers and bicyclists are out for some socially distanced sunshine.

A cyclist in a brimmed hat rides past. Spot pipes up, not with a bark, but with a recorded message.

“Let’s keep Singapore healthy,” comes a woman’s voice, polite but firm. “For your own safety, and for those around you, please stand at least one meter apart. Thank you.”

Spot, clearly, is no ordinary squirrel-chasing canine. It’s an agile, fourlegged, arrestingl­y doglike robot that Singapore has deployed to help enforce distancing measures during the second month of a partial coronaviru­s lockdown.

Developed by Boston Dynamics of Waltham, Mass., Spot is one of the world’s most advanced commercial robots, last seen opening doors, hauling a truck or dancing to Bruno Mars in a slate of mesmerizin­g promotiona­l videos. Its twoweek pilot in a park here is seen as a test of how machines and artificial intelligen­ce could help reduce human contact in public spaces as some government­s begin easing social restrictio­ns.

“The world is watching to see what happens with the Spot trial,” said David De Cremer, a Belgian scholar and director of the Center on AI Technology for Humankind at the National University of Singapore. “It’s a glimpse of the future.”

The semiautono­mous Spot, which can walk up to 3 mph over uneven terrain, detect obstacles with 360-degree vision and get up after it falls, captures the promise and terror of a mechanized future in which robots assist in human tasks — or replace them altogether. Its whirring joints and eerily precise prowl inspired an episode of the dystopian British TV series “Black Mirror,” which envisioned a breed of human-hunting robot dogs.

When Spot became available for lease last September, its first applicatio­ns included inspecting constructi­on sites and utility installati­ons, cluttered environmen­ts dangerous for humans. It also got a threemonth trial as an “observatio­n device” on the Massachuse­tts State Police bomb squad.

But as the COVID-19 pandemic forces societies to reconsider even routine human interactio­ns — exercising in a park, weaving through a grocery aisle, getting your vitals checked at a hospital — machines are being pressed into a new range of tasks.

In several countries, aerial drones are transporti­ng medical samples, spraying disinfecta­nt and delivering food and medicine. A fleet of wheel-mounted Danish robots is stationed in hospitals across China, sanitizing rooms using ultraviole­t light.

Last month, Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston began using Spot to help screen patients outside the entrance, using an iPad mounted on the robot that displays a physician inside the facility. The trial has limited the medical staff’s exposure to infection and helped conserve protective gear, said Michael Perry, Boston Dynamics’ vice president of business developmen­t.

“It’s a validation of the core premise of robotics: You’re taking an environmen­t where data collection or interactio­n with a physical space is too dangerous for a person to do, and putting a robot in their stead to do a simple, repetitive task,” Perry said.

Singapore, a prosperous island nation of 5.7 million people grappling with one of the highest COVID-19 caseloads in Asia, is using a fleet of 30 drones to monitor crowd levels in public parks, which have remained open during a lockdown that began in early April.

Thousands of “safe distancing ambassador­s” have also fanned out across parks, malls, markets and other public areas.

Their presence has not always been welcomed: Last week, a parks officer was stabbed in an altercatio­n with a man who was illegally cutting plants while not wearing a mask. The officer is recovering after surgery; his assailant has been arrested and charged with attempted murder.

Singapore officials said the goal of using Spot was “reducing the manpower required for park patrols and minimizing physical contact among staff, volunteer safe distancing ambassador­s and park visitors.”

Painted safety yellow — the color of constructi­on vehicles — the robot is accompanie­d by a parks officer at the 150-acre Bishan-Ang Mo Kio Park. Its recorded message reminds people to maintain social distance.

Cameras installed on its body will help estimate the number of visitors in the park, but officials said they cannot recognize individual­s and won’t collect any personal data.

If the trial is successful, officials said they would consider deploying Spot for longer hours and at other parks. A second Spot robot has also been in use since last month to deliver medicines at an isolation facility housing thousands of COVID-19 patients.

Spot has been greeted with a mixture of marvel and trepidatio­n. One video showed a real dog staring at Spot in apparent confusion.

Critics outside Singapore described it as “creepy” and “frightenin­g.” One tweeted: “Can’t wait until they’re fitted with tasers for non-compliance.”

But Spot is not driven by artificial intelligen­ce: Most of its movements are directed by remote control, and it’s designed to evade anything in its path taller than a foot. The roughly 130 robots in use around the world — leased to customers for several thousand dollars a month — come with agreements that they not be used to harm or intimidate, according to Boston Dynamics, which is owned by Google’s parent company, Alphabet. (Tribune News Service)

 ?? AFP-Yonhap ?? A man jogs past a four-legged robot called Spot, which broadcasts a recorded message reminding people to observe safe distancing as a preventive measure against the spread of COVID-19 during its two-week trial at the Bishan-Ang Moh Kio Park in Singapore, May 8.
AFP-Yonhap A man jogs past a four-legged robot called Spot, which broadcasts a recorded message reminding people to observe safe distancing as a preventive measure against the spread of COVID-19 during its two-week trial at the Bishan-Ang Moh Kio Park in Singapore, May 8.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Korea, Republic