HAL-like robot to help astronaut in space odyssey
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[June 29, 2018]
By Joey Roulette
Cape Canaveral, Fla. (Reuters) - A science
fiction-inspired robot hardwired to assist astronauts will launch from
Florida early Friday morning to become the first personal, artificial
intelligence-powered companion in space.
The Crew Interactive Mobile Companion, or CIMON, is an English-speaking
droid roughly the size of a basketball that will help German astronaut
Alexander Gerst conduct experiments on the International Space Station.
“What we’re trying to do with CIMON is to increase the efficiency of the
astronaut,” Matthias Biniok, an engineer for chip maker IBM and one of
the lead architects behind CIMON’s artificial intelligence, told
Reuters.
CIMON will verbally communicate step-by-step instructions to Gerst
during three planned science experiments on the space station’s European
module. Currently, astronauts read these instructions from a laptop,
which Biniok says is an arduous process that a responsive, hands-free
companion like CIMON can replace.
“Right now our main mission is to support the astronauts with their
daily tasks to save time, because time is the most valuable and most
expensive thing on the ISS,” Biniok said.
SCIENCE FICTION COMIC
The German Aerospace Center plans for CIMON to undergo three one-hour
sessions to demonstrate how well the robot can help with experiments,
like a crystal growth study, a test for its eight on-board cameras and
an exercise to help Gerst solve a Rubik’s cube.
CIMON will return to Earth on Dec. 13.
Biniok said the concept of CIMON was inspired by a 1940s science fiction
comic series set in space, where a sentient, brain-shaped robot named
Professor Simon mentors an astronaut named Captain Future.
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Bret Greenstein, IBM Global Vice President of Watson Internet of
Things Offerings, holds a clone of an artificial intelligence bot
named CIMON, at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida, U.S., June 28,
2018. Picture taken on June 28, 2018. REUTERS/Joey Roulette
Philipp Schulien, a German engineer for CIMON’s hardware contractor, Airbus,
said extending astronauts’ abilities in space is imperative for future space
exploration journeys, like the crewed missions to Mars that are scheduled to
take off as early as 2020.
“There are certain effects that might appear during long-term missions like the
so-called groupthink effect,” Schulien said, citing a behavioral phenomenon in
which humans that spend lengthy periods of time in isolation are driven to make
irrational decisions. “Long, isolated groups tend to stop communicating with the
ground,” he said.
A robot like CIMON with human-like personalities could help mitigate the
disorientation astronauts may feel in space, Schulien said.
CIMON is among 5,900 pounds of cargo launching to the International Space
Station on Friday, atop a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket.
(Reporting by Joey Roulette; editing by Bill Tarrant and Leslie Adler)
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