Houston Chronicle

Facebook’s robotic arms learning fast

- By Jeremy Kahn

Although Facebook Inc. doesn’t sell robots, its researcher­s use plenty of them — and the company said its machines are getting a lot smarter, a lot faster.

The social media giant announced in a blog post Monday that its engineers, working with computer scientists from New York University, have reduced the time it takes to teach a robotic arm how to grasp objects to tens of tries, rather than hundreds or thousands.

It may seem like a tangential developmen­t — Facebook doesn’t sell robots, after all — but advancemen­ts in robotics can lead to improvemen­ts in other forms of machinelea­rning, smartening the software Facebook has begun to use to spot harmful or unfavorabl­e behavior of users on the social network.

The company has been under ever-increasing pressure to use AI to police extremist violence, hate speech and misinforma­tion on its platform. The company has said it is making progress, but that systems that can reliably block such content without human interventi­on are still years away.

“The great thing about robotics is that it takes place in real time, in the real world,” Antoine Bordes, co-managing director of the company’s artificial intelligen­ce research labs, said in an interview last week in Paris.

He contrasted this to research that taught AI to master games, such as chess or Go, which can be run at super-human speeds allowing a software agent to learn from playing millions of games against itself in a period of just a few weeks. Many contempora­ry AI methods are extremely data hungry, requiring thousands or even millions of labeled examples to learn from, or, thousands or millions of attempts in a simulated environmen­t to equal or exceed human performanc­e.

Facebook began working on robots in the past year because it forced researcher­s to think creatively about how to make machinelea­rning more efficient, Bordes said, but added that the company has no plans to commercial­ize its robots any time soon.

In addition to the robotic arm, Facebook has experiment­ed with finding ways for a six-legged robot to teach itself how to walk. It said it eventually hoped to reduce the time needed to train such a skill to hours instead of days or weeks.

With computer scientists from the University of California at Berkeley, Facebook has experiment­ed with having robots learn about their world through tactile sensors that give them “a sense of touch,” rather than relying solely on computer vision.

Yann LeCun, Facebook’s chief AI scientist, said in an interview Friday that the company’s researcher­s had a responsibi­lity to “see around corners” to where technology might be heading. If robots did eventually become a popular consumer good and Facebook decided to sell them, he said, it would need to have experts already on staff.

“You’ve got to start early,” he said. “It’s not just something you can jump into when it picks up.”

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