An ambitious
robotics project that combines artificial intelligence, machine learning
and advanced sensors to understand and assist humans in real time could
be truly "revolutionary", according to the team working on it. The
SecondHands humanoid,
being developed for online supermarket Ocado, could soon be helping
factory engineers fix mechanical faults and even learn on the job.
The
robot will be completely autonomous and should be able to help with
everything from fetching tools to holding objects and even assisting
with cleaning and engineering tasks. The project is a collaboration
between the technology arm of the online supermarket and four
universities across the European Union. The robotics team at Ocado Technology believe it could become "the most advanced assistive robot in the world".
SecondHands will use 3D vision to see both depth and colour, with artificial intelligence
allowing it to learn by example and respond to its surroundings. Once
trained in a series of basic tasks the robot should be able to increase
its own intelligence and act independently. SecondHands will also be
able to understand natural speech, allowing it to respond to voice
commands.
The robot will eventually be put to work alongside engineers at Ocado's vast logistics factories in the UK, which handle more than 167,000 orders per week. When something goes wrong with a mechanical component SecondHands will help engineers carry out repairs quickly and safely. It could also operate in areas too dangerous for humans, examining high-speed conveyors at close quarters and handling toxic materials.
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The first SecondHands prototype will be operational at an Ocado testing facility in 18 months time and it is hoped the final version will be assisting engineers in factories in 2020. Unlike current collaborative and assistive robots, such as those competing in the recent Darpa challenge, Ocado says SecondHands will work just as quickly as a human.
"The big challenge is to get the robot to proactively do stuff, understanding where it is in the task and then doing something useful," Graham Deacon, leader of Ocado Technology's robotics research team tells WIRED.co.uk. Deacon describes Darpa as "a bit like watching paint dry" as the robots slowly perform simple tasks.
"We want our technicians to be able to rely on these robots. These robots have got to work in real time and respond in the right timeframes and be something that the technicians feel comfortable relying on."
SecondHands' potential for high-level reasoning, Deacon explains, is a work of artificial intelligence. Software will help the robot construct a vast knowledgebase around the tasks it carries out and then understand how they can be applied to other problems. In this sense, the robot will learn on the job.
The structure of SecondHands will be based on the next-generation ARMAR robot, developed at the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology in Germany. Ocado will work on the software side, with a speciality of vision-based grasping and manipulation. Additional research into artificial intelligence and contextual understanding is being undertaken at University College London, La Sapienza University of Rome and Ecole Polytechnique Federale de Lausanne.
The aim of the project is to create a robotic assistant that doesn't require any human input but that understands what it needs to do based on its own understanding and intelligence. "We would expect the robots to be able to track what the engineer is doing, understand the task that the engineer is trying to perform and then synthetically understand its own capabilities as a robot to proactively offer assistance," says Alex Harvey, head of project management at Ocado Technology.
Source : wired
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