ABOUT COSMIC LOG

Quantum fluctuations in space, science, exploration and other cosmic fields... served up regularly by MSNBC.com science editor Alan Boyle since 2002.

Alan Boyle covers the physical sciences, anthropology, technological innovation and space science and exploration for MSNBC.com. He is a winner of the AAAS Science Journalism Award, the NASW Science-in-Society Award and other honors; a contributor to "A Field Guide for Science Writers"; and a member of the board of the Council for the Advancement of Science Writing.

Check out Boyle's biography or send a message to Cosmic Log via cosmiclog@msnbc.com.



Talk to the robo-bunny

Posted: Thursday, November 08, 2007 4:36 PM by Alan Boyle


Nabaztag / Violet

Nabaztag robotic rabbits like these are being adapted by the Companions Project
for an experiment aimed at creating long-term conversational partners.


How many of you have a special friend who's known you for decades ... who can recall all your triumphs and foibles ... who knows you so well that he (or she) can tell you what you need to hear when nobody else will do it? That special someone may well be a standard feature in the lives of future generations - and it may well take the form of an ankle-high robotic bunny.

At least that's one of the concepts that the Companions Project is working with as it tries to develop computerized language systems that are good enough to keep up their end of a conversation. In a classic case of life imitating Hollywood, NASA is already working on computerized conversational assistants for astronauts. (Imagine this future space odyssey: "Dave? This conversation can serve no useful purpose anymore. Goodbye ..."). The Pentagon, meanwhile, has been funding a similar project. (Did I see that in "The Terminator" or "The Matrix"?)

Yorick Wilks, who is a researcher at the University of Sheffield in England and director of the Companions Project, says such systems could eventually serve here on Earth as long-term life coaches who never forget what you've done or where you've been (unless you want them to).

Scientists have been working on "chatterbots" since the dawn of the computer age, as exemplified by such experiments as ELIZA and PARRY. In this week's issue of the journal Science, Wilks provides an update on the state of the art. The bottom line? In most cases, the technology is "still not accurate enough to build a reliable machine partner capable of understanding what we say," Wilks reports. But just you wait.

Wilks and his colleagues are working on a couple of experiments to develop conversational software agents that are good enough to keep humans engaged for the long haul. We already occasionally deal with such agents, of course, when we call directory assistance, or check an airline reservation, or order a pizza. But these next-generation agents would be more like companions than clerks.

"The key feature that links all the companions is that they're agents that remember who you are," Wilks told me. "Your companion is for you, and it knows who you are, and it will stay with you for decades. This concept is going to become stronger and more powerful."

Enter the rabbit
Here's where the bunny hops into the picture. One of the Companions experiments involves the Nabaztag robotic rabbit - a wireless Internet contraption that can speak, move its ears and flash its lights in response to user inputs. Researchers have hacked the rabbit for speech recognition as well, with the aim of creating a specialized companion - for example, a personal health and fitness trainer.

The robo-rabbit could conceivably check your vital signs, listen to you talk about your eating habits and exercise routine, judge your mood and make suggestions or offer encouragement. The trainer wouldn't have to be a rabbit - it could take the form of a disembodied voice on a mobile phone, or an avatar on a computer screen.


AsAnAngel

A virtual avatar with a
bouffant hairdo helps
senior citizens reminisce in
one of the Companions Project's experiments.


In fact, Wilks said another experiment uses a virtual avatar to chat with senior citizens in Scotland. "We're using a nice head that comes from the French telephone company," Wilks told me. "It's a nice, bouffant-haired French lady."

The aim of the experiment is to draw out details about the ups and downs of the seniors' lives, and link those stories with personal photos to create an enduring electronic legacy.

"We're looking at old people reminiscing about their lives and building up a narrative by talking to a machine - a kind of organized reminiscence," Wilks explained.

You could have virtual companions for different areas of your life, just as you have different people nowadays to handle your finances, arrange your daily schedule and offer a sympathetic ear. "To be honest, if this kind of technology works, there'll be companions for every possible application," Wilks said.

In fact, other researchers have speculated that robots could well make inroads in the sex-and-marriage realm. Although Wilks said the idea is not "totally serious," there's at least a germ of truth to it. Even today, the Nabaztag robo-rabbit is occasionally put to an amorous application, he noted.

"We have long-distance lovers keeping in contact over it," Wilks said.

What will it take?
Looking ahead, researchers are trying to figure out exactly what it will take to get to a natural-language nirvana. Is it just a question of building up a huge database of queries and responses? That's a brute-force approach to the challenge of conversation, analogous to the way computers came to outdo humans at checkers and chess. But Wilks believes it will take something more: Computers also will have to absorb the linguistic structures that humans use, through automated learning.

"That might be closer to what our own cognitive structures seem to be," Wilks wrote in his Science report.

Based on researchers' experience with speech recognition, the chances are good that machines will eventually become adequate conversationalists, if we let them, Wilks said. "Twenty or 30 years ago, the idea of computerized recognition of speech was a dream. Now it's really not bad," Wilks said.

In fact, Wilks wonders why we don't have more chatterbots in our lives already. For instance, he's puzzled over the lack of bank machines that could chat with you about cashing a check or paying your bills.

"If I was a good entrepreneur, I'd have a go at it myself," he told me. "But I'm not. I'm a lab rat."

Would you have a go at it? Would you strike up a conversation with a bankbot, or a trainerbot, or a lifelong virtual companion? Going a bit further, are you game to have robots call the shots, or would your first instinct be to flee the robot uprising? Either way, feel free to add your comments below.

MAIN PAGE

Email this EMAIL THIS

Comments

I for one would greatly appreciate this technology.  Call me "pathetic" if you must, but I have difficulty socializing with people, recognizing their feelings and intentions, and just generally connecting with others.  Because of this, I am usually alone, often wallow in self-loathing, and feel guilty when my own ineptitude ruins the few meaningful relationships I've managed to have.  So a machine that could tailor its responses to MY personality, and learn what I want and need, would be a miraculous thing for someone like me.  Such a technology might even be programmed to help folks like me learn how to be better with others, sort of like a customized social tutor.  Unfortunately, I doubt very much the technology will get to that point in the next few decades, so it will probably just be more of the same - obvious chatbots and balky robo-toys.
Bilingual is an excellent idea...seems like it could be the perfect tool for learning other languages.
This reminds me of the totems and other methods that ancient peoples used but now we have the power to create the magic to have it respond,  that is amazing im sure that this is also showing a technology replacing religion, instead of prayer people will confess to thier rabbit, one that dous not judge.
Kinda sounds like Tweeky from Buck Rogers, or Furrbies, but I agree that you would have to be careful what you said. You wouldn't want one of these chatterboxes repeating what you said.
Grant and Angel saw this and thought it to be a tops Stellar useful Grande companion for tying us together with all our stellar triumphs and tribulations and useful for keeping health in our space home. Wed like to buy one immediately. Thanks for using the Term Angel my wife liked it . They would solve a lot of memory and everyday problems by leaving minds clear and useful . WE hope to get one NASA and hope Grant becomes a Super All American Astronaut. I think theyre cute . Thanks NASA for thinking of reminder rabbits they save time and energy. Grant thinks Astronauts are tops and out of this world.Perfect additon to any space home, thanks for the ride.
                                   Grant and Angel
There are many home bound seniors in this community that are only linked to the outside by their telephone. How wonderful to have a second choice, one that might remind you to take your meds, or help an alzheimers patient find their way home if they stray. Incorporated in a cane or "walker" it would be a great tool, possibly even notifying emergency services if need be.
There is a robot revolution, a post industrial war
Where automatons, called Robots, dominate the floor
Management is hiring them and letting go the men
Cause automated systems can work and work again
Very soon they'll work for man in many different ways.
They'll put out fires and mine the coal and visit the cosmos' stars.
They'll ring the bell and serve the food and operate our cars.
Man will be free to search; to evaluate every choice.
All he'll do to move his world is give command with touch and voice.
are we really so lonely and socially disconected that we can not find lifelong friends anymore? Is this the next step in the death of the family. It is so convenient just to kill the robobunny.. No repercussions.. we can always just buy another one.. the ultimate functional autistic toy.GG
Got one that Speaks in Cherokee?
Having a voice command assistant around the house of a physically handicapped person will be of great value. Trained dogs and monkeys can take care of the tasks requiring a physical action and the Bot can do the rest.
This would be super as a tool to train employees!
prety nice
Here's what I think will happen: Everyone will have their own personalized AI that will learn everything about them, watching them develop from birth and interacting with them, and the AIs will interact with each other to connect compatible people.  They'll choose your friends in school, your love interests, and your spouse.  But then, as they become more powerful, these AIs will simply replace all those functions - the same AI will assume different personalities to raise you, be all of your friends, and then be the perfect romantic partner (or even multiple partners) at each step of your life.  You will be surrounded by a multitude of loving, caring people who are all just subfunctions of one AI whose only mission in "life" is your health and happiness.  At that point, the human being will have been "solved" as thoroughly as checkers.
Creating a mechanical device that is programmed to give you the stimuli and  responses you think you want to hear is the social equivalent of living your life in a lazy-boy recliner. How many people have sunken into despair and suicide with such a lifestyle?

Don't be lazy. Be disciplined. Participate in other people's lives, and discipline yourself to participate. There's no big secret to happiness- just a little sweat and work.
these bots are the precursor of the artificial intelligences which will soon be developed and imbedded with the wisdom of ancient sages like Confucious, Aristotle, Socrates or Plato to guide the human race that have fallen slave to super-technology.
I dont think this is a useful educational device....so why have it stare at you
I love this concept. I do see the "sad and pathetic" POV, but not all of us have good friends that work the same work schedules as us, or perhaps live in different time zones, so it's difficult to connect with them when you need to talk about something. However, I believe the main consumer for this product will be female. If I want to complain about something just to get it off my chest, and my husband does not want to hear about it -- Why not talk to the bunny?
It will awesome like when your bored you can talk to it and gossip about everything.


SEND A COMMENT

PLEASE READ: All comments must be approved before appearing in the thread; time and space constraints prevent all comments from appearing. We will only approve comments that are directly related to the blog, use appropriate language and are not attacking the comments of others.

Message (please, no HTML tags. Web addresses will be hyperlinked):

TRACKBACKS

Trackbacks are links to weblogs that reference this post. Like comments, trackbacks do not appear until approved by us. The trackback URL for this post is: http://cosmiclog.msnbc.msn.com/trackback.aspx?PostID=455748

Latest Tech & Science News

Syndicate This Site

Add Cosmic Log to your news reader:
live.com xml
myyahoo msn
bloglines newsgator
google