September 14

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This jolly little robot get goosebumps

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Cat Behavior

Cornell researchers have made a little robot that can express its emotions through touch, sending out little spikes when it’s scared or even get goosebumps to express delight or exhilaration. The prototype, a cute smiling animal with rubber skin, is designed to test touch as an I/ O system for robotic projects.

The robot mimics the scalp of octopi which can turn spiky when threatened.

The researchers, Yuhan Hu, Zhengnan Zhao, Abheek Vimal and Guy Hoffman, made the robot to experiment with new methods for robot interaction. They compare the skin to” human goosebumps, cats’ neck fur raise, dogs’ back hair, the needles of a porcupine, spiking of a blowfish, or a bird’s ruffled feathers .”

” Research in human-robot interaction shows that a robot’s ability to use nonverbal behavior to communicate affects their potential to be useful to people, and can also have psychological consequences. Other reasons include that having a robot use nonverbal behaviours can help make it be perceived as more familiar and less machine-like ,” the researchers told IEEE Spectrum.

The skin has multiple configurations and is powered by a computer-controlled elastomer that can inflate and deflate on demand. The goosebumps pop up to match the expression on the robot’s face, letting humans to better understand what the robot “means” when it creates its little hackles or gets bumpy. I, for one, welcome our bumpy robotic overlords.

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