Japan teddybear robot comforts elderly, snores

The bear can respond to human actions with more than 300 actions of its own
A Fujitsu employee demonstrates a teddybear robot at a laboratory in Kawasaki, suburban Tokyo on March 31. The cuddly robot is designed to comfort the elderly and delight children by reading facial expressions and actions and responding to them.

Japanese researchers have developed a cuddly teddybear robot designed to comfort the elderly and delight children by reading facial expressions and actions and responding to them.

The fluffy by Fujitsu is still being worked on, but the electronics giant rolled out the as-yet-unnamed prototype for an early glimpse at an exhibition near Tokyo this week.

A camera in the nose of the bear can detect human faces and actions, such as waving of hands, while sensors inside its head and limbs can detect human touches and caresses.

The bear can respond with more than 300 actions of its own, from giggling and laughing to waving its paws and taking a nap -- and even snoring.

"We want to offer an object that can become part of the family, nursing home or school and that can benefit humans," a Fujitsu researcher told AFP during the sneak preview. "We really want it to look natural."

Fujitsu "plans to test the robot in nursing homes so that it can entertain and soothe elderly people," said the researcher.

The teddy is not the first cuddly in Japan, where the high-tech baby seal Paro is already used in hospitals and .

Paro coos and flaps its flippers to ease among the elderly and try to prevent depression and even .

Japan has the world's longest average life expectancy -- 79 years for men and 86 years for women, and more than a fifth of the population is aged 65 or older. By 2050, that figure is expected to rise to 40 percent.

Fujitsu said it may also use its robo-bear in schools to aid children to communicate, gain self-confidence -- or to help them wake up in the morning.

(c) 2010 AFP

Citation: Japan teddybear robot comforts elderly, snores (2010, April 2) retrieved 28 March 2024 from https://phys.org/news/2010-04-japan-teddybear-robot-comforts-elderly.html
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