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Photo by Diego San on Unsplash
O racismo no esporte infelizmente se tornou pauta frequente nos noticiários. E mesmo os atletas que não sofrem com racismo de forma explícita, lidam com a falta de apoio financeiro e emocional, carecem de representatividade e reconhecimento. Dois dos principais programas de esporte da TV aberta, Globo Esporte e Esporte Espetacular, da Globo, terão reportagens …
At Diego san
Diego San
This android infant was born to the University of California San Diego's Machine Perception Lab. Diego is about 4'3 (130cm), much larger than the average one year old child and weighs roughly 65 pounds (30kg).
The lab received funding from the National Science Foundation to contract Kokoro Co. Ltd. and Hanson Robotics, two companies that specialize in building lifelike animatronics and androids, to build a replicant based on a one year old baby.
It gives life-like facial expressions and was developed to approximate the complexity of a human body. It's the first of its kind, but wont be for very long. Other robot infants are in development along with Roboy, a robot boy that promises to go beyond this.
SOURCE
SOURCE
5 facts about Diego-san, UCSD's robotic toddler
Yes, UCSD's robot falls into uncanny valley territory...but here are some other things to keep in mind about Deigo-san:
1. His eyes are high-definition cameras that take in the world around him.
2. Diego-san is programmed to “learn” from what he sees -- people's gestures, movements, facial expressions.
3. He has 27 moving parts in his extremely expressive, life-like face.
4. Diego-San brings together researchers in developmental psychology, machine learning, neuroscience, computer vision and robotics.
5. He's a product of the “Developing Social Robots” project which aims “to make progress on computational problems that elude the most sophisticated computers and Artificial Intelligence approaches, but that infants solve seamlessly during their first year of life.”
Watch Diego-san in action or read more at phys.org and ucsd.edu
Diego-San
Es el nombre de un robot humanoide diseñado para reproducir los gestos y el proceso de aprendizaje de un niño de 1 año. El proyecto, desarrollado en la Universidad de California San Diego, implica a científicos procedentes de campos que van desde la robótica y la informática a la psicología del desarrollo.
El robot reproduce la cabeza del bebé y tiene 44 juntas neumáticas y 27 partes móvilesque le permiten realizar gestos que imitan a los humanos. Mediante sus cámaras de alta definición (situadas en los ojos), observa el mundo, y gracias a una serie de algoritmos aprende de la misma manera en que lo haría un bebé.
Al menos han tenido el detalle de no llamarle Skynet.