Home Subtitle videos Next up for AI? Dancing robots

Next up for AI? Dancing robots

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Udział:
00:04

I have an unusual job.

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I teach robots how to dance.

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In 2017,

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I transitioned from dancing on stages with humans

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to dancing with robots.

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Big robots, small robots,

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single-arms and roving robots.

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Robots that fly,

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vacuuming robots.

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A lot of robots that look like humans.

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And a whole bunch that don't.

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I'm pretty sure I've choreographed

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and danced with more different types of robots

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than anyone on Earth.

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Why do I do this?

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Because robots move

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and choreographers understand how movement affects us.

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If a robot slides politely out of a doorway to let you pass,

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might make you feel seen and acknowledged.

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If a robot marches quickly towards you and avoids you at the last second,

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it might cause revulsion and fear.

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Robots are beginning to show up in our everyday environments,

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from sidewalks to offices, backyards to hospitals.

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And they will be threatening and confusing to us

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if we do not carefully examine how they move.

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I'm also a roboticist and an engineer.

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I study this connection between robot motion and emotion.

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I combine my expertise in robotics and dance

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in the emerging field of choreo-robotics,

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the intersection of dance and robotics.

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Right now, we're giving AI a robot body with physical intelligence.

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AI technologies like GPT and Gemini are becoming the robot's brains,

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which means that robots are getting smarter.

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Much smarter.

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Think of what AI has already done to text and video generation.

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We are just scratching the surface on seeing what AI can do

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in the physical world.

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We are going to be interacting

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with these new intelligent robots more and more,

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interacting with them through movement.

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Roboticists already spend a lot of time thinking about movement,

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but they think about it in terms of efficiency,

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optimizing for speed or success.

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That's not enough.

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We need to teach robots how to dance.

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If a robot can dance,

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make every movement with intention, agility, balance,

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emotional expression and grace,

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I believe they will also become better caregivers,

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teachers and companions.

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It will help us build better general-purpose robots

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that we actually want to live amongst us.

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If we teach robots to dance,

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we expand the future of intelligent machines.

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Choreographers and engineers have made dances with robots since the 1990s,

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and these highly scripted performances have captured the public's imagination.

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They've made us feel wonder,

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made us laugh,

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made us want to dance along,

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and sometimes made us never want to meet a robot in real life.

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Dancing with robots is no longer just about art or entertainment.

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It is about transferring the lessons that one, all movement

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changes emotions,

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and two, contextual movement is critically important

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and applying those lessons to robots in our everyday lives.

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Robotics engineers are beginning to consider emotion and context

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when designing intelligent machines that interact with us.

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The choices we make now

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are going to dictate how we live our lives with robots.

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If we get this right,

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robots will be more welcomed, safe, and delightful.

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Humans will be more empowered and comfortable.

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Before AI, programmers needed hours to script a simple

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dance sequence for robot to perform.

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Just like they needed hours to script the robot to open a single door.

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With AI, you can teach the robot to open just a few specific doors,

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and it will learn to open all of them,

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even ones it hasn't seen before.

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It's also true for dance.

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You can teach the robot to dance with a specific person,

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and it will learn how to dance

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and move with many others

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in many different environments and circumstances.

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This is what I did at Everyday Robots,

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then a robot AI moonshot at Google.

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But rather than teach one robot,

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I used AI to teach 15 robots how to move together as a flock.

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We imagined a world where you could walk down a hallway filled with robots,

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and they would part to make space for you,

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like a flock of doves or a crowd of people on a city street.

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Where a robot could navigate seamlessly and even beautifully through a busy,

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chaotic Times Square.

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The world we live in is complicated for robots to understand,

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so it was impossible to script or choreograph interactions like these

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step by step.

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We needed to use the magic of AI

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to teach the robots how to improvise and react.

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This was a massive challenge that had never been done before,

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and the result is an interactive performance and installation work

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called Project Starling.

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This took us two years of hardcore engineering to complete.

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We trained an AI agent on the preferences of a choreographer,

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me.

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I chose the most engaging patterns and sequences.

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We also taught the robots how to recognize

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and respond to human gestures.

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While we were at it,

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we turned the robots into musical instruments.

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Each joint on the robot was mapped to a different sound.

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When the robot's torso moved, triggered a bass sound.

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Its hand opening and closing triggered a bell sound.

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The robot's actions created its own unique symphony.

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This is what Project Starling looks like.

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Our AI generated movement and our robot generated music.

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(Music)

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(Music ends)

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(Applause)

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I wanted it to feel like stepping out of your normal reality

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and into a waking dream,

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one that was so far from where we stand today.

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Yet, all the same felt like a world

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where your kids could grow up and feel calm,

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where you could be surrounded by machines and it felt natural and safe.

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People were drawn to just wander amongst these robots, you know,

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some were a bit tentative at first,

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but then they began to engage and explore

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with curiosity and playfulness.

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People kept coming back.

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What we learned about gesture, navigation,

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human interaction and expression can be applied to robots more generally.

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Think of the following future scenario.

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A robot in a senior living facility,

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waiting in a crowded cafe.

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You sit at your table,

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you wave over to it, make a sipping gesture,

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and the robot understands that you would like a glass of water.

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And when it drives over to you with its glass of water,

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it nods at the other people it passes

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and pauses graciously to let them go by.

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And when it arrives at your table, it places the glass gracefully down.

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And when you thank it, it nods in acknowledgment.

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Maybe it even performs a small celebratory dance in place.

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We can choose to build and program robots that we welcome.

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Robots that make us feel understood.

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Robots that we want to spend time with.

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The promise of robots that will live and work amongst us

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has existed for a very long time.

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From Karel Capek's 1920 play "Rossum's Universal Robots"

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to The Jetsons' Rosey the Robot

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to C-3PO of "Star Wars" and even Terminator,

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these stories have been deeply impactful in what we imagine and build.

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Yes, we can have robots that do our chores.

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But we can also have robots be our dance partners.

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Humans do a range of things,

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ceramics to diplomacy,

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singing in choirs to vertical farming.

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Imagine a world where robots can do a myriad of things

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that are functional or creative,

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and everything in between.

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General-purpose robots are coming,

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and they will help us to address big demographic challenges

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like aging populations and massive labor shortages.

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And how they move will unlock

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whether we let them into our homes

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and welcome them in our workplaces.

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Because we want to feel like we're still marvelously human

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in this increasingly AI world.

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And we can,

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because we have the power to choreograph the future we want.

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Thank you.

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