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Fulton Schools: In the News

ROBOTS TAUGHT TO WORK ALONGSIDE HUMANS BY GIVING HIGH FIVES

ROBOTS TAUGHT TO WORK ALONGSIDE HUMANS BY GIVING HIGH FIVES

Heni Ben Amor, an assistance professor who specializes in advanced robotics and artificial intelligence at ASU, says that having robots learn from watching humans interact won’t just make them better collaborators, it will help humans feel more at ease around robots too. “There’s a high demand for robots that are socially aware,” he says.

If robots can learn the basics of social interaction, like knowing how fast to move their arms or how close to stand to a person without making them feel uncomfortable, then humans are much more likely to accept robots in their home or workplace, he says.

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