back Back

Learning dance moves could help humanoid robots work better with humans

Jul. 12, 2024.
1 min. read. Interactions

Improving human-robot interactions in settings such as factory assembly lines, hospitals and homes

About the Writer

Amara Angelica

230.42235 MPXR

Electronics engineer/inventor

University of California San Diego engineeers have trained a humanoid robot to dance, wave, high-five, and even signal traffic (credit: UC San Diego Jacobs School of Engineering)

University of California San Diego engineers have trained a humanoid robot to effortlessly learn and perform a variety of expressive movements. These include simple dance routines (from videos) and gestures that can range from high-fiving to hugging.

The robot movements are directed by a human operator using a game controller, which dictates speed, direction and specific motions. The team envisions a future version equipped with a camera to enable the robot to perform tasks and navigate terrains autonomously.

The team will present their work at the 2024 Robotics: Science and Systems Conference July 15 to 19 in Delft, Netherlands.

Citation: Xuxin Cheng et al. Expressive Whole-Body Control for
Humanoid Robots. UC San Diego. https://expressive-humanoid.github.io/resources/Expressive_Whole-Body_Control_for_Humanoid_Robots.pdf (open access)

Let us know your thoughts! Sign up for a Mindplex account now, join our Telegram, or follow us on Twitter

Comment on this content

0 Comments

0 thoughts on “Learning dance moves could help humanoid robots work better with humans

Like

Dislike

Share

Comments
Reactions
💯 💘 😍 🎉 👏
🟨 😴 😡 🤮 💩

Here is where you pick your favorite article of the month. An article that collected the highest number of picks is dubbed "People's Choice". Our editors have their pick, and so do you. Read some of our other articles before you decide and click this button; you can only select one article every month.

People's Choice
Bookmarks