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Japanese company develops android to care for elderly

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BurtWorm Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Mar-30-07 12:34 PM
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Japanese company develops android to care for elderly
Medgadget has a slightly sarcastic take on this, but it really is beginning to look as though robots will be a standard piece of equipment in the future (if we should only live so long):

http://www.medgadget.com/archives/2007/03/androids_to_lif.html



The population of Japan is aging quickly and soon there may not be enough young folk left to care to their needs. This sounds like a job for some good old fashioned Japanese ingenuity.


In a public demonstration held in Tokyo on March 28, a human-sized android showed off its weightlifting skills by successfully picking up a 30-kilogram (66-pound) package from a desk and lifting a 66-kilogram (145-pound) humanoid doll out of bed.


University of Tokyo professor Yasuo Kuniyoshi and his team of engineers developed the 155-centimeter (61-inch) tall, 70-kilogram (154-pound) robot last year. A recent software upgrade allows the robot to move more like a human by constantly adjusting the power of its arm movements based on data received from 1800 tactile sensors embedded in its artificial skin.

It is this system of sensor-based control -- and not large motors -- that gives the robot its strength. "Large motors are not safe for use in household robots," explains Kuniyoshi. "Only a small amount of power is applied at each of this robot's joints, but it can successfully move heavy objects by using the tactile sensors to regulate how it lifts and carries things."

The droid demonstrated different maneuvers for different situations. To lift the 30-kilogram package, the robot used one arm to slowly slide it to the edge of the desktop, where it grabbed the package with its other arm to pick it up. To remove the 66-kilogram dummy from bed, the android slid its arms under the body, lifted it slightly and backed away.

Kuniyoshi says this robot's ability to lift such heavy objects with ease is unusual, and he hopes further improvements will earn the robot a job in nursing care or in the moving industry.


iRobot anyone . . . sure they (and by "they" we mean giant evil robot building businesses) get you to buy them to help lift our old and sick . . . but then Skynet goes live and becomes self aware and its ARMAGEDDON!
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kirby Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Mar-30-07 12:35 PM
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1. That elderly guy...
is so old, rigor mortis has set in!
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pitohui Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Mar-30-07 12:37 PM
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2. this is probably a good thing
i've noticed that the nurses i know seem to get bad backs sooner or later
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