Welcome
To
Robotics World

Monday 18 September 2017

Distributed intelligence in robots

In new research published today in Nature Communications, a group of European researchers have come out with a new kind of modular robot.
Many robots can complete a task by themselves, but don't work well as a team. On the other hand, scientists are now building machines that use distributed intelligence like that of a bee hive to work together, but these bots don't work well as independent components.
The researchers at Université Libre de Bruxelles wanted to build a versatile robot that could act independently but, when it encounters other like robots, surrender itself to a leader-bot, which they've called the "brain" unit. It's a sort of air traffic controller for the other robots that can arrange them as needed.
They create an artificial nervous system where each bot acts as a different neuron. But if the brain unit is damaged, the system has been designed to compensate. Three previous "neuron" units are deputized to act like one part of the brain unit, detaching from the dead node before reforming to carry on the work. The researchers hope to forge a world that looks past purpose-built bots and towards one where a single robot platform could work for every task ... as long as you can tell the individual components how to fall in place right.
"Our vision is that, in the future, robots will no longer be designed and built for a particular task," they write. "Instead, we will design composable robotic units that give robots the flexibility to autonomously adapt their capabilities, shape and size to changing task requirements."

These 1,069 Dancing Robots Just Broke a Guinness World Record

Robots are already taking lots of human jobs. Now it looks like breakdancers have to watch their backs next.
On August 18, a group of dancing Dobi robots broke the Guinness World Record for most robots dancing simultaneously, and the result is either an adorable display of what toys can do with new technology or a dystopian preview of our robot overlords entertaining the masses. Depends on how your day is going.
The new record was set by WL Intelligent Technology Co, LTD in Guangzhou, Guangdong, China. Their Dobi robots can talk, respond to voice commands, do pushups, and obviously bust a move. A total of 1,069 robots completed the dance routine, all programmed through one control system. But a few fell down—the total was originally supposed to be even higher.
The dance moves are pretty cute, since the robots are small enough to be toy-sized, but their synchronized routine is almost militaristic, and the perfect synchronization makes this dance routine downright creepy. (If you want to build your own dancing robot army, the Dobi retails for $329.)
Dancing robots animation
GIF
They broke the record previously set by fellow Chinese company Ever Win Company & Ltd, which had 1,007 robots dancing at once. Even though it's no longer the record, the video is still an impressive one, especially since the robots have arguably better dance moves. But style doesn't beat substance, so their record is gone.

Popular Posts