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Crean el primer robot que siente empatía por otro robot

Crean el primer robot que siente empatía por otro robot
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Robots might be acquiring empathy and intuition

15 Jan 2021 I knew you were going to do that! Can you predict what your partner is going to do or say? Even after a 25 year marriage, this feat of emotive intuition can be hit or miss. But now, a robot has been shown to be able to predict a partner robot s responses after only a few seconds of visual observation. Image: Predictions from the observer machine: the observer sees the left side video and predicts the behaviour of the actor robot shown on the right. With more information, the observer can correct its predictions about the actor s final behaviours. Credit: Creative Machines Lab/Columbia Engineering

Robot Displays a Glimmer of Empathy to Partner Robot

AP Photo/Eugene Hoshiko New York Like a longtime couple who can predict each other s every move, a Columbia Engineering robot has learned to predict its partner robot s future actions and goals based on just a few initial video frames. When two primates are cooped up together for a long time, we quickly learn to predict the near-term actions of our roommates, co-workers or family members. Our ability to anticipate the actions of others makes it easier for us to successfully live and work together. In contrast, even the most intelligent and advanced robots have remained notoriously inept at this sort of social communication. This may be about to change.

A Robot Shows Empathy to Another Robot — Is This Good or Bad?

A robot may not injure a human being or, through inaction, allow a human being to come to harm. A robot must obey the orders given it by human beings except where such orders would conflict with the First Law. A robot must protect its own existence as long as such protection does not conflict with the First or Second Laws. Fans of Isaac Asimov will recognize his Three Laws of Robotics, first presented in his 1942 short story “Runaround” and popularized in the 1950 collection “I, Robot.” While they’re generally recognized as rules for robot interactions with humans, the third could apply to robot-to-robot encounters as well. Although “protect” implies aggression or physical contact, it could also pertain to ‘intelligent’ contact. But what about one robot attacking another emotionally, as humans do to each other so frequently? We may soon find out as a new robot developed at Columbia University has learned to predict another robot’s future actions in a way that s

Robot displays a glimmer of empathy to a partner robot

Loading video. VIDEO: Short high-level video description of the Columbia Engineering Robot Theory of Mind project (audio narrations included). view more  Credit: Creative Machines Lab/Columbia Engineering New York, NY January 11, 2021 Like a longtime couple who can predict each other s every move, a Columbia Engineering robot has learned to predict its partner robot s future actions and goals based on just a few initial video frames. When two primates are cooped up together for a long time, we quickly learn to predict the near-term actions of our roommates, co-workers or family members. Our ability to anticipate the actions of others makes it easier for us to successfully live and work together. In contrast, even the most intelligent and advanced robots have remained notoriously inept at this sort of social communication. This may be about to change.

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