Humanoid robots best suited for interaction and not chores, says robotics pioneer

31 May 2023, 16:54

A robot designed by Engineers Arts and called Ameca
A robot designed by Engineers Arts and called Ameca. Picture: PA

Robots that perform domestic chores do not need a human shape, argues Cornwall-based Will Jackson.

Robots that look and act like people are best suited for human interaction and not domestic chores like unloading the dishwasher, a British robotics pioneer has said.

Will Jackson, founder and director or Cornwall-based robotics firm Engineered Arts, said it does not make business sense to design humanoid robots for low-value labour such as handling crockery – which can be a difficult task in itself.

Speaking at the IEEE International Conference on Robotics and Automation (ICRA) at ExCel in London, he said: “Throughout our life, Engineered Arts miraculously managed to be mostly a profitable company, and I really wanted to look at the business case for for humanoid robots – not just very lifelike humanoid robots, but I’m stretching that to anything with two arms, two legs and a head.

“So ideas – applications – with very high technical difficulty, with low financial value and low human value, and low interaction – to my mind – does not really make sense.”

Founded in 2004, Engineered Arts installed their first humanoid robot at Carnegie Science Center in Pittsburgh in 2009.

The company has grown to over 40 people with robots installed in more than 27 countries.

In 2021, Engineered Arts unveiled its most advanced humanoid, called Ameca, which has motors designed to make human-like facial expressions.

It is fluent in multiple languages – including French, German, English and Chinese – and can compose a poem or make drawings on request.

in 2022, Ameca became the first robot to deliver a Christmas message – which was generated using artificial intelligence.

Channel 4’s alternative Christmas message
Engineered Arts’ founder Will Jackson says humanoid robots are for human interaction (Richard Ansett/Channel 4/PA)

The robot tackled tough subjects such as the war in Ukraine, the death of the Queen, and climate change, which was broadcast on Channel 4.

Mr Jackson said humanoid robots like Ameca are not meant for household chores that can be performed by a machine, such as a dishwasher, which uses powerful jets and 90C water to clean dishes.

He added: “You don’t need a human shape when you can use automation engineering to do something super human.”

Mr Jackson said that placing high value on human interaction makes sense from a business perspective when it comes to humanoid robots.

He said: “It’s about entertainment. It’s about connection with people – communication.

“It’s the experience of talking with a humanoid robot.”

Ameca uses AI technology – similar to that used by ChatGPT – to communicate with people.

Mr Jackson said humanoid robots like Ameca could be deployed in care homes where they could provide entertainment with storytelling or placed in hotels to help with guest check-ins.

The team at Engineered Arts are also looking at designing humanoid robots to play board games such as chess.

Mr Jackson said: “Our plan, actually, is to make the robot not very good at chess and actually lose most of its games because the fun is actually just in the participation.

“It’s about the conversation.

“It’s about interaction with people – so these are the emerging applications that we think are going to be doable in the next two to three years.”

By Press Association

More Technology News

See more More Technology News

Online Safety Act

Young people support stricter rules on social media

A child using an Apple iPhone smartphone

MPs to debate Bill aimed at limiting harms of smartphone use among children

Santander

Santander banking services ‘fixed’ after outage

Exclusive
The independent reviewer of terror legislation has backed calls for social media to be banned for under 16s

UK's terror watchdog says calls to ban social media for under-16s 'have merit'

Dr Craig Wright arrives at the Rolls Building in London last year (Lucy North/PA)

Man behind false Bitcoin founder claim improperly used AI in appeal bid – judge

Donald Trump

Lastminute.com founder warns of ‘peril’ for tech sector amid Trump DEI crackdown

A Santander branch in Nottingham city centre

Santander users hit by outage affecting banking app and other services

A man holding a bank card and mobile phone while using a laptop

Barclays to pay up to £12.5m in compensation to customers hit by outages

Girl with a smartphone at night

Children under 16 could be banned from social media under new plans

The word Porn written in search bar on virtual screen

Fifth of adults who watch porn say content they view has become more extreme

A child using a smartphone

Hundreds of jobs ‘under threat at TikTok’s Ireland operation’

The OpenAI logo on a mobile phone in front of a computer screen displaying random binary data

Competition regulator will not investigate Microsoft partnership with OpenAI

Sir Cameron Mackintosh at the Les Miserables remastered screening in London

AI copyright plans would be ‘undemocratic own goal’, says Sir Cameron Mackintosh

A person's hands on a keyboard

Meta brings facial recognition tools to spot celeb scam adverts to the UK

A man looks at a phone

Tougher laws needed to combat non-consensual intimate images, MPs say

The hands of an elderly woman

Use of AI software that predicts falls and illnesses to be scaled up nationwide