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Robot passes one milestone in tests of self-awareness

One of the main reasons humans are different from robots is that we can recognize ourselves in a mirror. One robot begins to break down that barrier.
Written by Laura Shin, Contributor

What separates us humans from (most) animals and (all) robots?

The fact that we can recognize ourselves in a mirror.

But one robot is starting to break down that wall with some preliminary achievements that foretell a day when robots may recognize themselves.

Basically, the robot, who is named Nico, is pictured above and hails from Yale, can look at things in a mirror and recognize that what it sees gives it information about its own environment.

The paper describing its feat, "Mirror Perspective-Taking With a Humanoid Robot," by Yale PhD candidate Justin Hart and his advisor Brian Scasselati, was presented last month at the Conference on Artificial Intelligence in Toronto, Canada.

The test

Nico's great achievement is to do something humans do all the time in the presence of a mirror: To look at it and infer information about the room we are in. So, for instance, if there is a lamp to the right of you, you will see it in the mirror, and you could reach out and touch it without taking your eyes off the mirror.

Nico's achievement was a bit similar. It is able to look in the mirror and see its hand, which has a visual token attached. Learning from its view of its hand, it then can estimate where other objects in the room are, without needing to look at the actual room.

Many animals can't do this, because they can't understand what mirrors are. That's why animals often look in mirrors and think other animals are approaching them. As Hart explained in an email to NBC News:

What makes this exciting, in terms of self-awareness, is that the robot is able to use this knowledge that it has learned about itself in order to reason about a thing in its environment, the mirror, in a way that robots really haven't been able to do before.

Significance

The holy grail of robot self-awareness would be for a robot to recognize itself in a mirror -- a test passed only by a few animals, such as dolphins, elephants and chimps.

If a robot could do this, it could be made much more useful in everyday life. Its awareness of its own body in space could enable it to "live" in people's homes without causing harm to the furniture of other housemates.

Hart plans to put Nico through this more complex mirror test in the next few months.

Related on SmartPlanet:

via: NBC News, Physorg

photo: Nico. (Justin Hart/Yale University)

This post was originally published on Smartplanet.com

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