Latest Updates
-
World Meditation Day 2025: Meditation Beyond The Mat, Simple Moments That Bring Inner Peace -
Sreenivasan Passes Away: Malayalam Cinema Mourns The Legendary Actor-Writer's Demise -
Malayalam Film Industry Loses A Defining Voice: Actor, Screenwriter And Director Sreenivasan Passes Away At 69 -
Happy Birthday Dheeraj Dhoopar: How A TV Set Friendship Turned Into Love With Wife Vinny Arora -
Top Skin and Hair Concerns in India in 2025: What the Data Reveals -
International Human Solidarity Day 2025: History, Significance, and Why It Matters -
Purported Video of Muslim Mob Lynching & Hanging Hindu Youth In Bangladesh Shocks Internet -
A Hotel on Wheels: Bihar Rolls Out Its First Luxury Caravan Buses -
Bharti Singh-Haarsh Limbachiyaa Welcome Second Child, Gender: Couple Welcome Their Second Baby, Duo Overjoyed - Report | Bharti Singh Gives Birth To Second Baby Boy | Gender Of Bharti Singh Haarsh Limbachiyaa Second Baby -
Bharti Singh Welcomes Second Son: Joyous News for the Comedian and Her Family
Here's A Baby-Robot To Talk!
{image- www.boldsky.com}London: Robotics experts at the University of Plymouth are planning to work with a 1m-high (3ft) humanoid baby robot called iCub, in order to find out if it could be taught to talk.
In the coming 4 years, work will be done in collaboration with specialists who investigate how parents teach children to speak. Then, their findings will be put to use for the development of humanoid robots that learn, think and talk.
This is a first of its kind project conducting typical experiments with the iCub robot including activities like inserting objects of various shapes into the corresponding holes in a box, serialising nested cups and stacking wooden blocks.
The iCub will be coming to the university next year, and it will also be asked to name objects and actions so that it gets hold of basic phrases such as "robot puts stick on cube".
A consortium led by the University of Plymouth, a world leader in cognitive robotics research, emerged winner in a competition from 31 others and earned a 4.7m pounds grant for the Italk - Integration and Transfer of Action and Language Knowledge in Robots - project.
"The outcome of the research will define the scientific and technological requirements for the design of humanoid robots able to develop complex behavioural, thinking and communication skills through individual and social learning," BBC quoted Angelo Cangelosi, Professor in Artificial Intelligence, as saying.



Click it and Unblock the Notifications











