Lingodroid Robots Invent Their Own Spoken Language

Published: 20 May 2011 y., Friday

When robots talk to each other, they're not generally using language as we think of it, with words to communicate both concrete and abstract concepts. Now Australian researchers are teaching a pair of robots to communicate linguistically like humans by inventing new spoken words, a lexicon that the roboticists can teach to other robots to generate an entirely new language.

Ruth Schulz and her colleagues at the University of Queensland and Queensland University of Technology call their robots the Lingodroids. The robots consist of a mobile platform equipped with a camera, laser range finder, and sonar for mapping and obstacle avoidance. The robots also carry a microphone and speakers for audible communication between them.

To understand the concept behind the project, consider a simplified case of how language might have developed. Let's say that all of a sudden you wake up somewhere with your memory completely wiped, not knowing English, Klingon, or any other language. And then you meet some other person who's in the exact same situation as you. What do you do?

What might very well end up happening is that you invent some random word to describe where you are right now, and then point at the ground and tell the word to the other person, establishing a connection between this new word and a place. And this is exactly what the Lingodroids do. If one of the robots finds itself in an unfamiliar area, it'll make up a word to describe it, choosing a random combination from a set of syllables. It then communicates that word to other robots that it meets, thereby defining the name of a place.

In the future, researchers hope to enable the Lingodroids to "talk" about even more elaborate concepts, like descriptions of how to get to a place or the accessibility of places on the map. Ultimately, techniques like this may help robots to communicate with each other more effectively, and may even enable novel ways for robots to talk to humans.

 

 

Šaltinis: spectrum.ieee.org
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The co-operation projects

GERMANY TO INVEST 40 MILLION EUROS A YEAR IN COOPERATION WITH RUSSIA IN THE FIELD OF SCIENCE AND EDUCATION more »

BELARUS LAUNCHES SATELLITE TV CHANNEL

Belarus on 1 February inaugurated broadcasts of its first satellite-television channel, Belarus-TV more »

The Standby Module

RUSSIA VIEWS KAZAKHSTAN AS POTENTIAL PARTNER IN ISS ENLARGEMENT more »

Titan probe beams breathtaking photos

The world has got its first look at the surface of the Saturnian moon Titan with European space probe Huygens beginning to send breathtaking pictures more »

Intel to launch complete Media Center systems

CES 2005: This is going to cause unhappiness more »

Unknown scenarios

Saturn's first probe to land 'with a thump or a squelch' more »

Enhancing Partnership

RUSSIAN STUDENTS FOR MORE CHANCE TO GET TO GERMANY, PROMISES CHANCELLOR SCHROEDER more »

Cisco Partnerships Power Networks

While it doesn't aspire to be a consulting company, Cisco Systems Inc. does think it can show enterprises how to transform their networks to deliver new, intelligent services that can help them build their businesses and improve productivity. more »

Global ICT Conference Begins in Baku

A three-day global information communication technologies conference, “Digital Divide and Knowledge Economy: Problems and Solutions”, started at the Gulustan Palace of Baku on Thursday more »

TV Meets IP

Internet technologies promise to soon take couch potatoes to worlds far beyond TiVo more »