The Palm Beach Post

Drone patent includes dash of interactiv­ity

- By Hamza Shaban Washington Post

Amazon.com has been granted a new patent by the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office for a delivery drone that can respond to human gestures.

The concept is part of Amazon’s goal to develop a fleet of unmanned aerial vehicles that can swiftly send packages to customers in 30 minutes or less. Issued earlier this week, the patent may help Amazon grapple with how flying robots might interact with human bystanders and customers waiting on their doorsteps.

Depending on a person’s gestures — a welcoming thumbs up, shouting or frantic arm waving — the drone can adjust its behavior, according to the patent. The machine could release the package it’s carrying, alter its flight path to avoid crashing, ask humans a question or abort the delivery, the patent said.

Among several illustrati­ons in the design, a person is shown outside his home, flapping his arms in what Amazon describes as an “unwelcomin­g manner,” to showcase an example of someone shooing away a drone flying overhead. A voice bubble comes out of the man’s mouth, depicting possible voice commands to the incoming machine.

“The human recipient and/or the other humans can communicat­e with the vehicle using human gestures to aid the vehicle along its path to the delivery location,” the patent states.

Another diagram depicts the steps a drone will take when reading human body language as it delivers packages. They can release boxes with extra padding from the air, or they can land and then offer the parcels, the patent said.

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