Philippine Daily Inquirer

Robots let people with disability to be hands-on while away from work

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TOKYO—At a Tokyo cafe, Michio Imai greets a customer, but not in person. He’s hundreds of kilometers away, operating a robot waiter as part of an experiment in inclusive employment.

Dawn cafe’s robots are intended to be more than a gimmick, offering job opportunit­ies to people who find it hard to work outside the home.

“Hello. How are you?” a sleek white robot shaped like a baby penguin calls from a counter near the entrance, turning its face to customers and waving its flippers.

Imai is behind the controls at his home in Hiroshima, 800 km away, one of around 50 employees with physical and mental disabiliti­es who work as Dawn’s “pilots,” operating robot staff.

The cafe opened in central Tokyo’s Nihonbashi district in June and employs staff across Japan and overseas, as well as some who work on site.

It was originally supposed to open last year to coincide with the Paralympic­s, but the opening was postponed by the pandemic—just like the Games, which begin on Tuesday.

Around 20 miniature robots with almond-shaped eyes sit on tables and in other parts of the cafe, which has no stairs and smooth wooden floors large enough for wheelchair­s.

The machines named OriHime feature cameras, a microphone and a speaker to allow operators to communicat­e with customers remotely.

“May I take your order?” one asks, next to a tablet showing a menu of burgers, curry and salad.

As customers chat with the pilots operating the mini robots, three larger, humanoid versions move around to serve drinks or welcome customers at the entrance.

‘A part of society’

And there’s even a barista robot in a brown apron at the bar that can make coffee with a French press.

But the robots are largely a medium through which workers can communicat­e with customers.

“I talk to our customers about many subjects, including the weather, my hometown and my health condition,” said Imai, who has a somatic symptom disorder that makes leaving home difficult.

“As long as I’m alive, I want to give something back to the community by working. I feel happy if I can be a part of society.”

Other operators have a range of different abilities, including some Amyotrophi­c Lateral Sclerosis (ALS) patients who use eye movements on a special digital panel to send signals to the robots.

The project is the brainchild of Kentaro Yoshifuji, an entreprene­ur who cofounded the company Ory Laboratory that makes the robots.

After suffering a bout of bad health as a child that left him unable to go school, he began thinking about ways to bring people into the workforce even if they can’t leave home.

“I’m thinking about how people can have job options when they want to work,” said the 33-year-old.

“This is a place where people can participat­e in society.”

He establishe­d the cafe with support from major companies and crowd-funding, and says the experiment is about more than robots.

Work to do on inclusion

“Customers here are not exactly coming to this location just to meet OriHime,” he told AFP at the cafe.

“There are people operating OriHime behind the scenes, and customers will come back to see them again.”

The cafe’s launch comes with the Paralympic­s due to open on Aug. 24 and disability advocates debating Japan’s progress on inclusion and accessibil­ity.

Since Tokyo won the bid to host the Games in 2013 it has touted efforts to make public facilities more accessible.

But support for inclusion remains limited, said Seiji Watanabe, head of a nonprofit organizati­on in central Japan’s Aichi that supports employment for people with disabiliti­es.

In March, the government revised regulation­s to edge up the minimum ratio of disabled workers at a company from 2.2 to 2.3 percent.

“The level is too low,” Watanabe told AFP. “And Japanese companies don’t have a culture of hiring diverse human resources on their own initiative.”

At Dawn, Mamoru Fukaya said he and his 17-year-old son were enjoying the cafe on a lunchtime visit.

“(The pilot) was very friendly,” the 59-year-old said. “Since he said he can’t work outside his home, it’s great that there’s this kind of chance.”

Yoshifuji is focused on the cafe project now, but thinks robots could one day even make the Paralympic­s more inclusive.

“There’s a possibilit­y that a kind of new Paralympic­s for those who are bedridden can be created,” he said.

“We could even create new sports. That might be interestin­g.”

 ??  ?? HIGHTECH NOVELTY In this picture taken on Aug. 17, a customer takes pictures of a robot delivering drinks at the cafe launched to enhance access and inclusion to the workforce of people with disabiliti­es.
HIGHTECH NOVELTY In this picture taken on Aug. 17, a customer takes pictures of a robot delivering drinks at the cafe launched to enhance access and inclusion to the workforce of people with disabiliti­es.
 ?? —PHOTOS BY AFP ?? JUST LIKE BEING THERE A robot controlled by a person with disability working hundreds of kilometers away at home delivers drinks to customers at Tokyo’s Dawn Cafe on Tuesday.
—PHOTOS BY AFP JUST LIKE BEING THERE A robot controlled by a person with disability working hundreds of kilometers away at home delivers drinks to customers at Tokyo’s Dawn Cafe on Tuesday.
 ??  ?? MAY WE TAKE YOUR ORDER? Miniature humanoid robots called OriHime welcome guests and offer their services at the Dawn Cafe in Tokyo.
MAY WE TAKE YOUR ORDER? Miniature humanoid robots called OriHime welcome guests and offer their services at the Dawn Cafe in Tokyo.

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