AI Was Asked to Design a Walking Robot. It Came Up With This

When a group of researchers asked an AI to design a robot that could walk, it created a “small, squishy and misshapen” thing that walks by spasming when filled with air

The researchers — affiliated with Northwestern University, MIT, and the University of Vermont — published their findings in an article for the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences on October 3.

“We told the AI that we wanted a robot that could walk across land. Then we simply pressed a button and presto!” Sam Kriegman, an assistant professor at Northwestern University and the lead researcher behind the study, wrote in a separate blog post.

In 26 seconds, the AI designed a blueprint for a robot “that looks nothing like any animal that has ever walked the earth,” Kriegman added.

The AI began with a small rubber block and modeled different shapes before arriving at the final design that could walk. The final design walks after being pumped with air by a researcher.

Kriegman said the researchers weren’t quite sure why the robot had this peculiar shape — and why it was filled with holes.

“When humans design robots, we tend to design them to look like familiar objects,” said Kriegman, “But AI can create new possibilities and new paths forward that humans have never even considered.”

Creating robots that can walk isn’t a new concept. For example, robotics company Boston Dynamics has spent more than a decade designing walking robots.

However, Kriegman’s findings present yet another showcase of the unusual outcomes while blending AI and robotics.

A Polish drinks company appointed an AI-powered humanoid robot named Mika as its CEO in August last year. Mika told Reuters that it doesn’t have weekends and is “always on 24/7.”

And another AI-powered robot, presented in Geneva in July, even gave reporters the side-eye when asked whether it would rebel against its creator.

See more here sciencealert.com

Please Donate Below To Support Our Ongoing Work To Defend The Scientific Method

PRINCIPIA SCIENTIFIC INTERNATIONAL, legally registered in the UK as a company incorporated for charitable purposes. Head Office: 27 Old Gloucester Street, London WC1N 3AX. 

Trackback from your site.

Comments (6)

  • Avatar

    Tom

    |

    El perfecto. About the same as I get for customer service in many applications.

    Reply

  • Avatar

    Howdy

    |

    “that looks nothing like any animal that has ever walked the earth,”
    Looks to me like a Hippo.

    “Kriegman said the researchers weren’t quite sure why the robot had this peculiar shape — and why it was filled with holes.”
    I expect one looks at the code to see what information the program can draw upon. It doesn’t have an imagination.
    Which shows the possibility of error if programmers and such can’t even guess what their own ‘app’ can do, particularly when mission critical. Stabbing in the dark?

    Reply

  • Avatar

    VOWG

    |

    G I GO does apply to all AI

    Reply

    • Avatar

      aaron

      |

      AI is neither artificial or intelligent, just coding

      Reply

      • Avatar

        Howdy

        |

        The definition of what walking is seems to be rather, loose.

        Holes in the end result = Holes in the code? Right angled right top, poorly defined?

        Reply

      • Avatar

        Carbon Bigfoot

        |

        Aaron that’s the same comment I posted here two months ago—-plagiarism is the epitome of……fill in the blank!!

        Reply

Leave a comment

Save my name, email, and website in this browser for the next time I comment.
Share via