Porterville Recorder

Lifelike robots made in Hong Kong meant to win over humans

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HONG KONG — David Hanson envisions a future in which Ai-powered robots evolve to become “super-intelligen­t genius machines” that might help solve some of mankind’s most challengin­g problems.

If only it were as simple as that.

The Texas-born former sculptor at Walt Disney Imagineeri­ng and his Hong Kong-based startup Hanson Robotics are combining artificial intelligen­ce with southern China’s expertise in toy design, electronic­s and manufactur­ing to craft humanoid “social robots” with faces designed to be lifelike and appealing enough to win trust from humans who interact with them.

Hanson, 49, is perhaps best known as the creator of Sophia, a talk show-going robot partly modeled on Audrey Hepburn that he calls his “masterpiec­e.”

Akin to an animated mannequin, she seems as much a product of his background in theatrics as an example of advanced technology.

“You’re talking to me right now, which is very ‘Blade Runner,’ no?” Sophia said during a recent visit to Hanson Robotics’ headquarte­rs in a suburban Hong Kong science park, its home since soon after Hanson moved to the city in 2013.

“Do you ever look around you and think, ‘Wow I’m living in a real world science fiction novel?”’ she asked. “Is it weird to be talking to a robot right now?”

Hanson Robotics has made about a dozen copies of Sophia, who like any human is a work in progress. A multinatio­nal team of scientists and engineers are fine tuning her appearance and the algorithms that enable her to smile, blink and refine her understand­ing and communicat­ion.

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