Son of Furby
By Janet Raloff
Ten years ago, I was one of the many parents who stood in
line to get the first wave of the first-generation Furbies, those
computer-driven mechanical toys that could talk and offer rudimentary responses
to children playing with them. Resembling little alien critters, Furbies had
their charm. They also could annoy you – big time – as they mysteriously woke
up without warning and started whoo-ing and talking. That’s why our family
chose to quickly paralyze our little blue-eyed wonder (by removing its
batteries). But I still love the idea of this primitive little robot. Which
helps explain why I experienced more than a little robot envy, yesterday, at
videos of Leonardo, a social critter-droid that Cynthia Breazeal and her
colleagues are developing at MIT.
Breazeal was at City University of New York to launch the inaugural World
Science Festival event. Her session, Pioneers of Science, offered six prescient
New York
high-school scientists and engineers a chance to meet and pick the brains of
either of two renowned and charismatic researchers.
Breazeal, one of them, fielded questions from three students
– two girls and a boy – who have been actively building robots themselves. So
some of their questions were fairly techie, such as how do you decide which
sensors to use, or where are the big breakthroughs needed to deliver robots
with the independence and problem-solving abilities of R2-D2 and C-3PO. They’re
the Star Wars icons that first turned Breazeal, as a child, onto robots.
What Breazeal really liked about the Star Wars machines was
their social skills, the ability to read the emotions of people and to create a
social relationship with their human masters. This, in turn, has influenced her
research, suggesting the development of companionable robots. She offered
videos showing how the facial expressions of children could be read by robot
sensors and responded to in comforting ways.
One long-term goal might be to allow these mechanical
computer systems with engineered friendliness and patience to become peerlike
teachers. They might educate preschoolers in a foreign tongue, for instance, by
speaking to them in the second-language-of-choice as kids play with their robot
on the living room floor. The teddy-bear-like Leonardo or his kin could gently
correct kids if they used the wrong article or verb form.
Some of the best questions to Breazeal came from some especially young members of the audience. A girl – perhaps 7 or 8 years old – asked: “Will there ever be a robot smarter than us or that can do the same things as us?” Breazeal ducked that one, telling this disarming child to grow up, do the research, and report back to the MIT team.
A boy, perhaps 10 or so, asked what’s the point of designing robots that can,
as Breazeal says, “go in your living room.” The boy conceded as how these could
be cool, but then asked are they really necessary if they can only do what
people already do.
“It’s a good question,” the MIT researcher said. She then
went on to explain that as people are living longer, the ratio of the elderly
in society is growing. In Japan,
for instance, they’re predicted to soon represent one third of that nation’s
population. Unless Japan wants to turn its entire economy over to caring for
its seniors, its society – and many other Western economies – much find a way
for great shares of the elderly to remain independent as long and as inexpensively
as possible.
Having a sort of electronic pet that responds to their
emotions (with physical features – smiles or puzzlement or surprise) based on
their owner’s tone of voice and facial expressions might go a long way toward
limiting social isolationism. Unlike real pets, Leonardo and his furry buddies
could talk, wouldn’t die if their owners forgot to feed them, and wouldn’t soil
the carpet if their owners lacked the mobility to walk them outdoors every few
hours.
Breazeal says these might also serve as pets for hospitalized children for whom
real animals might pose allergic or hygienic risks.
Of course, the audience question that really caught Breazeal by surprise came
from a senior citizen himself: Do you think robots will eventually reach the
degree of sociability that humans will fall in love with them or have sex with
them? Oops…this was an R-rated issue being raised in a forum for families with
young children. Ever the pro, Breazeal responded saying “There’s a book on
that: I’ll let you read the book.”