[archive]

Robots categorized as: Toy

1993

Paro

Paro is a therapeutic robot baby seal, intended to have a calming effect on and elicit emotional responses in patients of hospitals and nursing homes, similar to Animal-Assisted Therapy.

It was designed by Takanori Shibata of the Intelligent System Research Institute of Japan’s AIST beginning in 1993. It was first exhibited to the public in late 2001, and handmade versions have been sold commercially since 2004. Paro is based on harp seals Shibata saw in Canada, where he also recorded their cries that Paro uses.

The robot has touchsensors and responds to petting by moving its tail and opening and closing its eyes. It also responds to sounds and can learn its own name. It can show emotions such as surprise, happiness and anger. It produces sounds similar to a real baby seal and (unlike a real baby seal) is active during the day and goes to sleep at night.

AIST refers to Paro as a ”Mental Commitment Robots”, which they define as: “developed to interact with human beings and to make them feel emotional attachment to the robots. Rather than using objective measures, these robots trigger more subjective evaluations, evoking psychological impressions such as “cuteness” and comfort. Mental Commitment Robots are designed to provide 3 types of effects: psychological, such as relaxation and motivation, physiological, such as improvement in vital signs, and social effects such as instigating communication among inpatients and caregivers.”

Paro is at present also being used in Danish nursing homes.

1985

R.O.B. – Robotic Operating Buddy

R.O.B. (Robotic Operating Buddy) was an accessory for the Nintendo Entertainment System. It was released in July 1985 in Japan as the Famicom Robot and later that year as R.O.B. in North America. It had a short lifespan, with support for only two games which comprised the “Robot Series”; Gyromite and Stack-Up. R.O.B. was released with the intention of portraying the Nintendo Entertainment System as something novel in order to alleviate retail fears following a crash in the video game market in 1983. [Wikipedia]

2006

Lego Mindstorms

LEGO Mindstorms is a line of Lego sets combining programmable bricks with electric motors, sensors, Lego bricks, and Lego Technic pieces (such as gears, axles, and beams). Mindstorms originated from the programmable sensor blocks used in the line of educational toys. The first retail version of Lego Mindstorms was released in 1998 and marketed commercially as the Robotics Invention System (RIS). The current version was released in 2006 as Lego Mindstorms NXT.


2001

Teddy

There are oodles of humanoid robots (”mecha” in the film’s lingo) inhabiting the Stanley Kubrick-Steven Spielberg mashup AI: Artificial Intelligence, but the anthropomorphic Teddy the Supertoy is clearly the bot to beat. A walking, talking teddy bear, Teddy bonds to his family almost as strongly as Haley Joel Osment’s David, but without the massive creepiness factor that makes us want to keep David at arm’s length. List candidate Gigolo Joe (Jude Law) is flashier and more philosophical, but ultimately just another Hollywood Hooker With a Heart of Gold. (Possibly literally.) Teddy may be a toy, but he can reason, engage in conversation, play games, and even stage a rescue attempt should he see that a friend is in danger. And worst-case scenario, he’ll quietly keep you company at the bottom of the ocean for 2000 years. You think Gigolo Joe would ever shut up about women and mecha-human relations during all that time? We think not. (premiere.com)

1999

Aibo

AIBO (Artificial Intelligence roBOt, homonymous with “pal” in Japanese) was one of several types of robotic pets designed and manufactured by Sony; there have been several different models since their introduction on May 11, 1999. AIBO was discontinued in 2006. Being able to walk, “see” its environment via camera, and recognize spoken commands, the AIBO robotic pets are considered to be autonomous robots, since they are able to learn and mature based on external stimuli from their owner or environment, or from other AIBOs. Artist Hajime Sorayama created the initial designs for the AIBO. On January 26, 2006 Sony announced that it would discontinue AIBO and several other products as of March, 2006. It will also stop development of the QRIO robot. AIBO will still be supported until 2013 (ERS7 model), however, and AIBO technology will continue to be developed for use in other consumer products. (Wikipedia)