Ever feel like no one really understands you? Well "Pepper" could be about to change all that.
That's because Pepper is actually a robot and touted as the world's first with the ability to read emotions.
The humanoid robot --
which looks slightly like a shrunken Michelin Man -- was unveiled to
curious onlookers in Tokyo stores on Friday by SoftBank, a Japanese
telecom giant and Aldebaran, a French robotics company.
Pepper doesn't look much
like its name. Standing under four-feet tall with a tablet computer
mounted to its chest, it has human-like hands and a mermaid-like lower
torso — though its toddler-like voice seems incongruous with this
state-of-the-art facade.
Despite the high-pitched
voice, Pepper is able to converse about everything from the weather, to
more sophisticated topics like the latest fluctuations in the stock
markets.
Yet the great differentiator is the fact Pepper is fully interactive, making eye contact when meeting people.
Pepper is "the first
robot to read human emotions," said Softbank's CEO Masayoshi Son told
reporters at a press conference in the Japanese capital on Thursday.
"Robots like Pepper are
adding a new dimension in our daily lives. They would change it with the
same magnitude as the PC, Internet and mobile phones did."
How Pepper reads your moods
Using its emotion
recognition functions, Pepper can react to people in its vicinity --
making jokes, dancing and even rapping (in Japanese), as it did in an
onstage demonstration on Thursday.
Pepper can analyze
facial expressions, human voice tones and gestures, then react
autonomously through algorithms, its creators say.
"Our vision is to create
an affectionate robot that can understand people's feelings. Then
autonomously, it will take action," said Son.
He envisions robots
playing roles in education, healthcare and entertainment, but their
primary goal isn't to work in the industry like existing robots.
"Our's is not aiming for productivity, but rather at the home or store, where we provide fun and entertainment," Son said.
Pepper is designed to be
a family robot -- perhaps more like a sleeker version of Rosie, the
household robot on the cartoon "The Jetsons."
"Pepper is powered by
love inside a family," Son said. "Not only is he making jokes, making
them laugh. The robot acts out at its own expense, in natural disaster,
it can help them and also comfort those people who are sad or lonely,
encourage them or make them laugh."
When Pepper goes on sale
Pepper goes on sale in
Japan for around US$2,000 in February 2015. For now, several Peppers are
at Softbank stores in Tokyo for spectators to visit. The creators say
before releasing Pepper for sale, they want the robots to accumulate
more knowledge, to evolve and get more sophisticated in its interactions
with humans.
"Several thousand
Peppers are going to learn at the store," Son said. "Everything they
learned and gained, is going to be accumulated into the cloud-based
service. So that can be accelerating the evolution of the collective
wisdom."
Pepper functions through cloud-based artificial intelligence.
SoftBank and Aldebaran
envision the robot being sold overseas eventually. After all, Pepper is
quite the polyglot, speaking 17 languages.


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