Technology

#New AI technique lets robots detect human touch by analyzing shadows

#New AI technique lets robots detect human touch by analyzing shadows

Scientists from Cornell University have developed a way for robots to identify physical interactions just by analyzing a user’s shadows.

Their ShadowSense system uses an off-the-shelf USB camera to capture the shadows produced by hand gestures on a robot’s skin. Algorithms then classify the movements to infer the user’s specific interaction.

Study lead author Guy Hoffman said the method provides a natural way of interacting with robots without relying on large and costly sensor arrays:

Touch is such an important mode of communication for most organisms, but it has been virtually absent from human-robot interaction. One of the reasons is that full-body touch used to require a massive number of sensors, and was therefore not practical to implement. This research offers a low-cost alternative.

The researchers tried out the system on an inflatable robot with a camera underneath its skin.

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They trained and tested the classification algorithms with shadow images of six gestures: touching with a palm, punching, touching with two hands, hugging, pointing, and not touching.

It successfully distinguished between the gestures with 87.5 − 96% accuracy, depending on the lighting.

The system was most accurate in daylight (96%), followed by dusk (93%), and night (87%).
Credit: Hu et al.
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