This robot can be a friend, mentor

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FORPHEUS, a fourth-generation table-tennis robot developed by automation parts maker Omron.-AFP
FORPHEUS, a fourth-generation table-tennis robot developed by automation parts maker Omron.-AFP

Las Vegas - Other robots such as Qihan Technology's Sanbot and SoftBank Robotics' Pepper, are being "humanised" by teaching them to read.

By AFP

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Published: Thu 11 Jan 2018, 10:00 PM

Last updated: Fri 12 Jan 2018, 9:06 AM

The robot called Forpheus does more than play a mean game of table tennis. It can read body language to gauge its opponent's ability, and offer advice and encouragement.
"It will try to understand your mood and your playing ability and predict a bit about your next shot," said Keith Kersten of Japan-based Omron Automation, which developed Forpheus to showcase its technology.
"We don't sell ping pong robots but we are using Forpheus to show how technology works with people," said Kersten.
Forpheus is among several devices shown at this week's Consumer Electronics Show which highlight how robots can become more human like by acquiring "emotional intelligence" and empathy. "We've been working very hard to have an emotional robot," said Jean-Michel Mourier of French-based Blue Frog Robotics, which makes the companion and social robot called Buddy, set to be released later this year.
"He has a complex brain," Mourier said at a CES event. "It will ask for a caress or it will get mad if you poke him in the eye."
Other robots such as Qihan Technology's Sanbot and SoftBank Robotics' Pepper, are being "humanised" by teaching them to read and react to people's emotional states.


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