Three
Questions for Robotics Inventor Cynthia Breazeal about Social Robots
The
inventor of a home helper robot called Jibo discusses the importance of social
machines.
·
WHY IT MATTERS
Social awareness could dramatically expand the
applications for robotics.
As
an academic, Cynthia Breazeal pioneered research into social interaction
between humans and robots, developing Kismet, a robot that used facial expressions
in a meaningful way. This week a company she founded announced Jibo, a prototype robot that aims to bring some of the ideas
developed through this research to market. Jibo’s body and face are simple but
emotionally expressive, and the robot responds to simple voice commands. For
example, it can be told to shoot videos, relay messages, or operate
“smart-home” gadgets. Breazeal spoke to Will Knight, MIT Technology
Review’s news and analysis editor, about the inspiration for Jibo, and
the challenges of commercializing social robots.
What’s
so special about Jibo?
We’ve
been creating social robots for many, many years. They’ve tended to be research
robots—extravagant, expensive, temperamental robots. We can now create a social
robot at a mass consumer price point.
When
you think about how human beings really experience the world—think, act, and
behave—it’s social, it’s emotional, it’s physical. A really simple example is
that you can turn on the camera app on your smartphone, you can step out of the
action, and you can take a picture. But a social robot plays that role on your behalf.
You can ask Jibo to take a picture, and he goes into cameraman mode. But he’s
also got autonomy, so he’s able to track faces and see where people are in the
environment—so you can be in those pictures.
Verbal
communication is notoriously difficult for machines. How sophisticated is
Jibo’s voice interface?
One
of the big lessons we’ve learned from a lot of AI is that the more you can
scope the task, the better the chances that you’re going to deliver a good
experience. So Jibo’s speech and natural language processing capabilities are
purposely designed to support the skills that Jibo has.
Jibo
is a charming, enchanting little persona, but he is really trying to support
you specifically with what he can do. Of course, over time the skills will
expand, but we’re not saying you can say whatever you want and Jibo will do
something useful.
What
have you learned since developing Kismet?
That
people’s interactions with social robots combine the best attributes of human
relationships, companion-animal relationships, and our relationships with
technology.
We
did this weight-management robot a number of years ago, and one of the
fascinating things we found was that the physical attributes of the robot
really tapped into people’s minds in a way that they were more engaged with the
robot, and did better than when just using a computer, even when the
information was identical. People also formed this emotional relationship with
the robot that was almost more like [the relationship with] a companion animal.
The human robot relation is something very special and very different. Once you
understand that, you can start to leverage it in a way that really empowers
people.
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