Robot Babies
Can scientists build a machine that learns as it goes and plays well with others? A new robot design draws on ways human babies learn about the world
- By Abigail Tucker
- Photographs by Timothy Archibald
- Smithsonian magazine, July 2009, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 6)
Rodney Brooks, an M.I.T. computer scientist who masterminded a series of robotics innovations in the 1990s, said recently that for a robot to have truly humanlike intelligence, it would need the object-recognition skills of a 2-year-old child, the language capabilities of a 4-year-old, the manual dexterity of a 6-year-old and the social understanding of an 8-year-old. Experts say they are far from reaching those goals. In fact, the problems that now confound robot programmers are puzzles that human infants often solve before their first birthday. How to reach for an object. How to identify a few individuals. How to tell a stuffed animal from a bottle of formula. In babies, these skills are not preprogrammed, as were the perceptual and conversational tricks Einstein showed me, but rather are cultivated through interactions with people and the environment.
But what if a robot could develop that way? What if a machine could learn like a child, as it goes along? Armed with a nearly $3 million National Science Foundation grant, Movellan is now tackling that very question, leading a team of cognitive scientists, engineers, developmental psychologists and roboticists from UCSD and beyond. Their experiment—called Project One, because it focuses on the first year of development—is a wildly ambitious effort to crack the secrets of human intelligence. It involves, their grant proposal says, "an integrated system...whose sensors and actuators approximate the levels of complexity of human infants."
In other words, a baby robot.
The word "Robot" hit the world stage in 1921, in the Czech science fiction writer Karel Capek's play Rossum's Universal Robots, about a factory that creates artificial people. The root is the Czech robota, for serf labor or drudgery. Broadly understood, a robot is a machine that can be programmed to interact with its surroundings, usually to do physical work.
We may associate robots with artificial intelligence, which uses powerful computers to solve big problems, but robots are not usually designed with such lofty aspirations; we might dream of Rosie, the chatty robot housekeeper on "The Jetsons," but for now we're stuck with Roomba, the disk-shaped, commercially available autonomous vacuum cleaner. The first industrial robot, called Unimate, was installed in a General Motors factory in 1961 to stack hot pieces of metal from a die-casting machine. Today, most of the world's estimated 6.5 million robots perform similarly mundane industrial jobs or domestic chores, though 2 million plug away at more whimsical tasks, like mixing cocktails. "Does [the robot] prepare the drink with style or dramatic flair?" ask the judging guidelines for the annual RoboGames bartending competition, held in San Francisco this summer. "Can it prepare more than a martini?"
Now imagine a bartender robot that could waggle its eyebrows sympathetically as you pour out the story of your messy divorce. Increasingly, the labor we want from robots involves social fluency, conversational skill and a convincing humanlike presence. Such machines, known as social robots, are on the horizon in health care, law enforcement, child care and entertainment, where they might work in concert with other robots and human supervisors. Someday, they might assist the blind; they've already coached dieters in an experiment in Boston. The South Korean government has said it aims to have a robot working in every home by 2020.
Part of the new emphasis on social functioning reflects the changing economies of the richest nations, where manufacturing has declined and service industries are increasingly important. Not coincidentally, societies with low birthrates and long life expectancies, notably Japan, are pushing hardest for social robots, which may be called upon to stand in for young people and perform a wide variety of jobs, including caring for and comforting the old.
Some scientists working on social robots, like Movellan and his team, borrow readily from developmental psychology. A machine might acquire skills as a human child does by starting with a few basic tasks and gradually constructing a more sophisticated competence—"bootstrapping," in scientific parlance. In contrast to preprogramming a robot to perform a fixed set of actions, endowing a robot computer with the capacity to acquire skills gradually in response to the environment might produce smarter, more human robots.
"If you want to build an intelligent system, you have to build a system that becomes intelligent," says Giulio Sandini, a bioengineer specializing in social robots at the Italian Institute of Technology in Genoa. "Intelligence is not only what you know but how you learn more from what you know. Intelligence is acquiring information, a dynamic process."
"This is the brains!" Movellan shouted over the din of cyclone-strength air conditioners. He was pointing at a stack of computers about ten feet tall and six feet deep, sporting dozens of blinking blue lights and a single ominous orange one. Because the Project One robot's metal cranium will not be able to hold all the information-processing hardware that it will need, the robot will be connected by fiber-optic cables to these computers in the basement of a building on the UCSD campus in La Jolla. The room, filled with towering computers that would overheat if the space weren't kept as cold as a meat locker, looks like something out of 2001: A Space Odyssey.
As Einstein could tell you, Movellan is over 40, bespectacled and beardless. But Einstein has no way of knowing that Movellan has bright eyes and a bulky chin, is the adoring father of an 11-year-old daughter and an 8-year-old son and speaks English with an accent reflecting his Spanish origins.
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Comments (10)
The chinese room experiment is actually an intuitive trick to move perspective from an intelligent system to a component which is himself intelligent and irreducible.
A similar trick from the other side of the discussion would be to consider the creation of a special device that simulates an individual nerve cell, accepting electrical and chemical inputs and creating outputs in a manner similar to a living cell. Were a human to be slightly damaged due to an accident, such a device could allow them to function and experience the world in a way indistinguishable from before the replacement. Given this sort of mechanism, a person could eventually have a completely artificial mind, yet still recognize his friends and interact with the world in the same manner as always.
The world as we understand it is waves and particles interacting in enormously complicated manner which we understand and can even model in a basic sense. There is no detectable, intuitive awareness in a cup of water, nor in a diamond, nor in a microprocessor. This should not be taken to mean that it is impossible to make an aware system which fundamentally requires this material to function.
Posted by Scott Bercaw on November 5,2010 | 03:23 PM
The information about David Hanson was interesting. Is he still involved in this type of work and can I contact him?
Posted by Charles Valliere on February 18,2010 | 10:32 PM
I just had to respond to your great article, and it "kicked in" my poet side. Perhaps I am going to re-think my position on "thinking robots" . . .
INCOMPARABLE
I marvel at the speed the mind can make a judgement-
a wonderful computer, God presented us at birth-
to understand just how it works is impossible to do
for it can't compare to anything on earth.
Robot man, you do excite me, with your many tasks and tricks-
you can solve a lot of problems that is true-
but you'll never, really ever have the knowledge of a brain,
for the master of the brain did not choose you.
Now the scientists and professors pool their talents every day-
their test tubes and intelligence to share-
the inventions never ending, even walking on the moon-
Still they'll never make a robot who can care.
Elizabeth Jane Van De Ven
Posted by Elizabeth Van De Ven on October 31,2009 | 08:54 AM
"Birth of a Robot", which refers to Javier Movellan. It brought to mind the oldest running sci-fi series, Doctor Who, in which there was a group of androids called "The Movellans". In contrast to the other vaguely humanoid and garbage-can-shaped robotic villains, The Cybermen and The Daleks, the Movellans sought to emulate the ideal human form.
Life imitates art - again.
Posted by Garry Jantzen on July 25,2009 | 10:19 PM
The idea that children "figure out" things is misleading. Does a spider figure out how to spin a web? Does a puppy figure out how to play with a ball? Millions of years of evolution are involved in that figuring. Robots don't have any roots, you might say. Making them behave like people is going to be a long struggle. "Stop The Hype About Robots," short video on YouTube, sums up my impressions from watching this field for many years.
Posted by Bruce Deitrick Price on July 16,2009 | 04:50 PM
@Joshua Jackson
Re: Searle and the Chinese Room Argument
It is actually still being discussed among many philosophers just what the argument is actually about. Some, like Richard Carrier, actually believe it to prove hard AI possible. The reason this is is because in order for a rulebook to be able to translate, it would have to be IMMENSE. It would have to know desires, wants, future predictions, and so on. In fact, it would have to be so large, that it contains all the rules that make our minds work. Most people do not do the thought experiment properly, but it requires a lot to imagine. Imagine someone asking the room, "Would you like a hamburger for lunch tomorrow?" How could the rulebook answer the question unless it were a mind itself? So, if it is really possible to write such a rulebook, then hard AI is in fact possible. Simply thinking about it doesn't prove anything one way or the other. The fact that robotics is progressing and more complicated AI engines are constantly being developed gives us no reason to think that hard AI is in principle impossible.
Posted by Aaron Urbanski on June 25,2009 | 02:18 PM
Anyone interested in the subject of AI should familiarize themselves with John Searle's "Chinese Room" thought experiment, discussed in depth here: http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/chinese-room/.
I think it clearly demonstrates that "strong" AI is impossible, as computers simply manipulate symbols and do nothing further. Manipulation of symbols, however complicated the given process is, does NOT entail intelligence.
Posted by Joshua Jackson on June 24,2009 | 08:27 PM
Robots as caregivers? robots to make me feel something? The idea is scary, futuristic. Is it really going to work? And, if it does, what will it change?
Posted by Jacob Willis on June 24,2009 | 04:38 PM
This article again raises all the scary questions about robots that have been proposed in various popular movies. The fact that scientists continue to attempt to create truly humanoid robots despite the fact that such robots cause extreme discomfort in children especially, and in most adults, is worrisome to me. There are efforts to create robots to replace human caregivers for the elderly and disabled, and this quest for the humanoid substitute for real humans just seems wrong-headed and ominous. Have I been watching too many movies, or is this based on such deep psychological human characteristics of recognition, trust/distrust, and empathy?
Posted by Ruth Ann Meszaros on June 22,2009 | 01:32 PM
I suggest you name them HAL.
Posted by Peggy Ives on June 20,2009 | 10:36 PM