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Boston Dynamics' humanoid robot may have skippedthe inaugural "robot Olympics"In China last week, but that doesn't mean the engineers behind the machine have been sitting around watching the world go by.
Indeed, a video released by the Massachusetts-based company on Wednesday reveals that the team has been hard at work on Atlas, its advanced and highly skilled bipedal robot.
Working with experts at the AI- and robotics-focused Toyota Research Institute (TRI), Boston Dynamics has equipped Atlas with a Large Behavior Model (LBM), essentially a sophisticated AI system trained on vast datasets of human actions, aimed at enabling the robots to understand, generate, and adapt complex, human-like behaviors for activities in real-world environments.
The video shows Atlas performing a long sequence of complex tasks that force it to combine object manipulation with locomotion. They include walking, crouching, and lifting objects, while at the same time packing, sorting, and organizing.
"By adopting LBMs, new capabilities that previously would have been laboriously hand-programmed can now be added quickly and without writing a single new line of code," the Massachusetts-based companysaid in a release.
To test its ability to adjust itself, an engineer interrupts Atlas in the way that an annoying co-worker might do, by repeatedly closing the lid of the box from which it is taking things, and by sliding the box across the floor.
If Atlas had a voice — and no doubt one day it will — it would probably have said: "Can you stop messing around — I'm trying to get a job done here."
Atlas passes with flying colors, refraining fromDecking the Troublemakerand instead readjusting its position to continue with the task at hand.
This work provides a glimpse into how we're thinking about building general-purpose robots that will transform how we live and work," said Scott Kuindersma, vice president of robotics research at Boston Dynamics. "Training a single neural network to perform many long-horizon manipulation tasks will lead to better generalization, and highly capable robots like Atlas present the fewest barriers to data collection for tasks requiring whole-body precision, dexterity, and strength.
Boston Dynamics is one of a growing number of tech companiesWorking on humanoid robots, with rapidly advancing technology paving the way for increasingly agile, dexterous, and intelligent bipedal robots that could one day perform a huge variety of activities.Even the laundry ...
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