Overprotective Censor Robots


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Today: what’s wrong with the word “analysis” that it had to be partially bleeped out by asterisks into “***ysis”? Or was it “paralysis”? Or “dialysis”? (Found on Webby’s site, People’s Choice voting section).

Tomorrow: cell phone software that bleeps out naughty syllables from conversations in real time.

Green Pool Cleaners – Solar Breeze

(TrendHunter.com) The Solar Breeze robotic pool skimmer can float continuously in your pool, operating on solar power directly during the day, and on battery power at night. However, no electrical connections are needed, nor is manual recharging. The solar panels not only run the skimmer, but recharge the battery dur…

Robotic Housekeepers – Robot Butlers and Maids

(TrendHunter.com) I’ve been thinking of replacing my monkey butler for a while, but you know, good help is hard to find. Thankfully now there’s the ‘Robot Butler’ which in all honesty is amazing!

There were invented to help seniors. Apparently in Japan, there are tons of elderly who need more help in their day to da…

36 Freaky Robots With Human Jobs

(TrendHunter.com) Trend Hunter’s robot section features several hundred robots, but none are more freaky than these 36, which each have human jobs. Having said that, I did cheat a little on this list, adding some unemployed robots that are simply human-like and freaky. Enjoy!

Robots Receptionists

Robot Secreta…

Canine Robots – G-Dog

(TrendHunter.com) Before we get carried away with robotic soul mates, let’s start out with man’s best friend. HPI has produced a robotic G-Dog. This isn’t the name of the latest rap star – it’s a robotic canine. Set to go on sale in July, the G-Dog is powered by 7.2 volt nickel hydrogen batteries, is equipped with th…

Robot Secretaries (UPDATE) – Phorone (VIDEO)

(TrendHunter.com) Kokoro Dreams’ life-sized android secretary’s name is Phorone. She stands 175 cm and she has already starred in an anime where she was the protagonist. The big hope is that someday, she, and robots like her, will be able to replace real human secretaries.
“She is apparently powered by pressurized a…

Emotional Robots – MIT’s Nexi (VIDEO)

(TrendHunter.com) Nexi is a next generation humanoid robot conceived and designed by roboticist Cynthia Breazeal’s group at the MIT Media Lab. They call this so-called “emotional robot” an MDS (Mobile/Dexterous/Social). The robot can move its tiny body, hands, and face suggestive of human emotions. Gizmowatch says …

Self-Making Beds – Selfy the EasyBed

(TrendHunter.com) The alarm clock goes off. You roll out of bed and stumble into the bathroom to brush your teeth. As you walk back into the bedroom, you stop and stare. Something isn’t quite right. Something is different. MY BED! IT’S MADE! Oh yeah, I forgot I bought one of those self-making beds designed by Enrico …

Smart Baby Robots – iCub Learning to Talk

(TrendHunter.com) The University of Plymouth is leading a consortium in the UK with the goal of teaching a “baby” robot to speak. The researchers will be working with language development specialists to understand how humans learn speech, and will try to apply that approach to a humanoid robot called the iCub (which,…

Self-Learning Robots – ApriPoko Universal Remote

(TrendHunter.com) This little guy (8 x 11″) was designed by researchers at Toshiba. ApriPoko, as he is referred to, is the ultimate universal remote – and not just for your television. Check this out… ApriPoko detects infrared waves when you use a remote, for your tv, for your stereo, for whatever, and he asks you …

Sporty Robo Webcam – MPC-095 Got Ball

(TrendHunter.com) This cute posable webcam that targets sports fans is absolutely adorable.

The Rodintech MPC-095 webcam comes in the shape of a cute robot-guy holding a ball. You can adjust the robot in different poses thanx to its flexible arms and legs.

As for the ball, you can choose between a football (both A…

Robot Wars – Robo-One Championships (VIDEO)

(TrendHunter.com) One by one the fighters are introduced into the ring at the Korakuen Stadium Hall in Tokyo, accompanied by thunderous applause. But this is no normal boxing match – the contenders are small humanoid robots built and controlled by hobbyists, participants in the twice-yearly “Robo-One Championship…

BRAINWAVE: Common Senses

Nice, nice. I’ve lost my connecting flight and now i’m stuck in Madrid Barajas waiting for the next flight to Sevilla. It’s an 8 hour wait but i’m on my way to ZEMOS98 so i am still cheerful.

Anyway, gives me plenty of time to catch up with the emails and the long overdue posts. So back to New York where i was a few days ago and the Exit Art gallery. I’m still wondering how this place managed to escape my radar so far.

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Until April 19 they are running a fascinating exhibition on artistic explorations of the current advancements in neurological research. The works shown in BRAINWAVE: Common Senses encourage visitors to consider the brain not only as the center of human activity but as a site for interpretation, for scientific and philosophical debates, for examining our relationship to the world – and for questioning our common sense.

I am usually not very excited by media art works which engage with the little grey cells. Blame it on the BrainBar, when i discovered it i somehow felt that had seen it all. Well, maybe not… I went to Exit Art to see Fernando Orellana and Brendan Burns’ robot that “plays back dreams” which was twice as fantastic as i expected but i also discovered 2 or 3 outstanding works.

Suzanne Anker‘s fascinating and elegant The Butterfly in the Brain uses three-dimensional Rorschach inkblot tests, brain scans and images of butterfly wings to explores the imagery of the symmetrical (or virtually symmetrical) structures of butterflies, the brain, and chromosomes.

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I somehow can’t get the black hovering butterfly bat she painted on the wall out of my mind. “By taking the butterfly bat image out of a textbook, scaling it up to a large size, and putting it in a site-specific environment, one turns the image into an entirely new and other kind of affective entity,” she explained.

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Suzanne Anker, The Sum of All Fears (detail). Image courtesy of the Exit Art gallery

Although the use of Rorschach inkblots is controversial in psychology, the images are widely recognized among the public.

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Crab, 2005

Anker used a computer program to convert an inkblot into 3D structure so intricate they could probably not be re-created using traditional sculpture. After which a machine produces the object using plaster and resin. “Looking in 3-D,” Anker argued, “one begins to assess new meanings: bones, sea creatures, body parts. These are surrogates for the imagination itself, opening up a dialog between the mind and body. What happens when you can pick up a psychology test in your hand? The mind essentially has been embodied.”

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Gossipers, 2005 (more images)

She also transposed butterfly wings onto MRI scans, drawing a parallel between genetic patterns in nature and advanced imaging technologies. Like constellations in the sky, butterfly shapes may be found in neurological maps as well as charts of urban sprawl.

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Suzanne Anker, MRI Butterfly (detail). Image courtesy of the Exit Art gallery

Another work i found really moving and riveting was a video installation by Phil Buehler, a photographer, fascinated by “haunted ruins” of abandoned Psychiatric Hospitals.

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Buehler, Windows of the Soul. Image courtesy of the Exit Art gallery

Windows of the Soul, asks whether or not one can read madness in another’s eyes. 300 b&w mug shot photographs of mental patients, taken in the ’50s when they were admitted in the hospital. The eyes of the individuals are projected on a canvas hanging from the ceiling. The rest of the face lays on the floor. Every 5 seconds, another pair of eyes and a face take their place on the split screen. Riveting and disturbing.

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Dustin Wenzel‘s brass sculptures are brain-cavity castings of Great Whales from the New Brunswick Museum collection.

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Dustin Wenzel, (front) Sperm Whale Endocranial Cast, (back) Right Whale Endocranial Cast. Image courtesy of Exit Art Gallery

It has recently been discovered that some humpback whales have spindle neurons, a type of brain cell previously considered to exist only in dolphins, humans and other primates, which may indicate a high capacity for intelligence. Although white males possess the largest physical brain of any animals (Wenzel’s castings were indeed impressively big), there is no scientific consensus about the nature, magnitude or even existence of cetacean intelligence.

And now for the gizmos:

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Jamie O’Shea, Alvin (image courtesy of Exit Art gallery)

Artificial neural networks are often used in voice recognition systems and IA research. They consist in mathematical computations that mimic the neural network patterns of the nervous system. Jamie O’Shea‘s Alvin is a realization of an interactive and electronic neural network constructed with physical hardware. When left alone Alvin is dormant, but if you the lay your hand on the interface provided, you will set an electronic neural-like network in motion.

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Alvin is a cellular automaton organized around eight cells which produce sound. The sound one cell produces is determined by what sound the other cells are making. This interrelated input and output scheme is an artificial neural network; a simulation of a brain. The imitation of life goes even further, because Alvin’s sound circuits are built and destroyed by one another, rather than just turned on or off.

Swarm, by David Bowen (whom i interviewed a year ago), is an autonomous roaming device whose movements are determined by houseflies housed inside the device itself.

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David Bowen, Swarm (detail). Image courtesy of Exit Art Gallery

The chamber where they live contains food, water and light to keep them warm but also sensors that detect the changing light patterns produced by their movements. The sensors send the light data to an on-board microcontroller, which in turn activate the motors moving the device in relation to the movements of the flies.

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David Bowen, Swarm. Image courtesy of Exit Art Gallery

Oh, look! i took all those little images.

BRAINWAVE: Common Senses is on view until April 19, 2008 at Exit Art Gallery in New York. This exhibition is part of Exit Art’s Unknown Territories series of exhibitions that explore the impact of scientific advances on contemporary culture and examine in particular how contemporary artists interpret and interact with the new knowledge and possibilities created by technological innovation in the 21st century.

Robotic Babysitters – In-Store Robo-Nanny Lets You Shop in Peace

(TrendHunter.com) This is not the first inhuman babysitter, but the new robot recently “employed” at the famous Fukuoka Japanese department store is the perfect godsend for shopaholic parents with kids.

The 1.4-meter tall robot with a colorful yellow / white outfit was developed by Tmsuk and features an integrated p…

Psychotherapist Robots – MindMentor

(TrendHunter.com) In this day and age, a large percentage of the population in developed countries is either seeing a metal health hygienist or therapist (psychiatrist, psychologist, counselor) or has seen one at some point in their life. From the way things are presented, people are made to feel that if they’ve neve…

Bio-Charging – Self-Healing Artificial Muscle Charges an iPhone

(TrendHunter.com) What’s better than successfully creating an artificial muscle that heals itself? Having that muscle charge your iPhone or other gadgets!

Combining breakthroughs in self-healing materials and artificial arms, University of California, Los Angeles researchers created such muscles that can generate e…

Drum Machine Robot – Autonomous Robot Makes Music With Its Surroundings (VIDEO)

(TrendHunter.com) This unique little robot roams around looking for objects. When it finds one, it drums on it, samples the sound, then breaks into a pretty catchy rhythm using that new sound. The robot can also detect foot stomping or hand clapping and adjust its tempo to match it. According to the website, the m…

Dextre – Nasa’s Giant Fixing Robot (GALLERY)

(TrendHunter.com) This scary looking robot from outer space is not one of the decepticons, its NASA’s repair robot named Dextre. It is designed to repair the International Space Station as a replacement for an astronaut going out in space with its suit and oxygen. Dextre is about twelve feet long that can operate o…

Fast Reflex Robots – Big Dog (VIDEO)

(TrendHunter.com) Boston Dynamics has just created “the most advanced quadruped robot on Earth”.

The freaky machine, called Big Dog, can across rocky ground and deal with a sharp kick. The project is sponsored by the US Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), who want the robot to assist soldiers in terr…

Nocturnal Intelligence Robot – COM-BAT Droid

(TrendHunter.com) There are a number of nicknames that could be used to describe the new spy bot being developed by the US Army, but I can guarantee most of them would be easier to use than to call it by its technical description: a robogargothopter! I think it means “robot bat-like flapping wing thing” (or something…