Quasi the Intelligent Robot
Jake David writes to tell us about a uniquely emotive robot — named Quasi — developed by researchers at Carnegie Mellon University. Quasi appears capable of holding intelligent conversations. Here is a a video of the robot in action. Note that the animatronic figure is little more than the emotive organ of the robot, whose entirety encompasses the display booth as well. From the CMU page: "Quasi has a number of features in addition to his eyelids for conveying emotion, the most prominent of which are Color Kinetics LED lighting fixtures for his eyes and antennae. These combine red, green, and blue LEDs... His antennae can move both forward and backward as well as in and out, giving them an expressive quality not unlike that of a dog's ears."
Someone posted the exact same thing on YouTube. But seriously though, if you listen a bit carefully, you will notice that some of the words appear alike in different sentences. Also, I think it is likely that some of the sentences are premade or rather each word have been inserted a number of times for different situations.
If there really was someone under the table, then he has been seriously good at it, to do things that you usually wouldn't do. For instance, during small pauses in conversations, the robot seemed to pick up some random "advertisement" lines. Also, it seemed to remember the camera holder's name, and how could one under the table see *and* remember that, when he had to take care of all the other stuff?
It may be fake, but given from that video, I wouldn't agree.
Clicked pie.
From the two videos on YouTube (especially the second one which explained what the team was doing), I have to say that this was an extremely interesting experiment, but not in robotics --- in human psychology.
The reaction of people to Quasi was quite amazing, and not limited to kids. I found myself reacting to Quasi as an entity too, despite knowing that this was merely an interface manipulated by humans.
This is probably a good indicator of how humans will react to real AI-based robots once they eventually appear, if they too offer such a highly human-like facade. I think it goes well beyond mere "suspension of disbelief" --- we seem to WANT to accept humanity in objects. Very intriguing.
"The question of whether machines can think is no more interesting than [] whether submarines can swim" - Dijkstra