Scientists have created a robot that can have babies

TECHi's Author Chastity Mansfield
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Last Updated Originally published August 13, 2015 · 3:20 AM EDT
Cnbc View all Cnbc Two Takes by TECHi Read the original story Published August 13, 2015 Updated January 30, 2024
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Chastity Mansfield
Chastity Mansfield
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Okay, so scientists haven’t ACTUALLY created a robot that can have babies, but something somewhat similar was achieved during a recent experiment. In an effort to demonstrate how robots can evolve and learn, a group of British and Swiss researchers programmed a robotic arm to assemble a separate device in such a way that it’s able to learn from its mistakes and make improvements. 

Cnbc

Cnbc

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Everyone who thinks robots are going to take over the world might be getting a lot more frightened: Scientists have created a machine that’s able to have babies. Sort of. In an experiment designed to show how robots can learn and evolve, researchers in Cambridge and Zurich programmed a robot arm—or “mother”—with an algorithm to create a device made out of blocks containing motors—its “child”. The blocks are assembled into a structure by the robot arm, and the motors are turned on. A camera detects how far the blocks are able to travel. The robot arm sees this, and then modifies the next “baby” to try to make it go further, learning from the mistakes and good traits of the last one. This is all done without human intervention. The research was published in the journal PLOS One. Luzius Brodbeck, one of the researchers from the Institute of Robotics and Intelligent Systems at ETH Zurich, said the robots are normally programmed to do one just thing.

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