Emotion-sensing robot launches to assist space station astronauts
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[December 06, 2019]
By Joey Roulette
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - An intelligent robot
equipped with emotion-sensing voice detectors was headed to the
International Space Station after launching from Florida on Thursday,
becoming the latest artificial intelligence-powered astronaut workmate
in orbit.
The Crew Interactive Mobile Companion 2, or CIMON 2, is a spherical
droid with microphones, cameras and a slew of software to enable emotion
recognition.
The droid was among 5,700 pounds (2,585 kg) of supplies and experiments
aboard SpaceX's Falcon 9 rocket, whose midday launch had been delayed
from Wednesday due to high winds.
"The overall goal is to really create a true companion. The relationship
between an astronaut and CIMON is really important," Matthias Biniok,
the lead architect for CIMON 2, told Reuters. "It's trying to understand
if the astronaut is sad, is he angry, joyful and so on."
Based on algorithms built by information technology giant IBM Corp <IBM.N>
and data from CIMON 1, a nearly identical prototype that launched in
2018, CIMON 2 will be more sociable with crew members. It will test
technologies that could prove crucial for future crewed missions in deep
space, where long-term isolation and communication lags to Earth pose
risks to astronauts' mental health.
While designed to help astronauts conduct scientific experiments, the
English-speaking robot is also being trained to help mitigate groupthink
— a behavioral phenomenon in which isolated groups of humans can be
driven to make irrational decisions.
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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. REUTERS/Joey Roulette
"Group-thinking is really dangerous," Biniok said. In times of
conflict or disagreement among astronauts, one of CIMON's most
important purposes would be to serve as "an objective outsider that
you can talk to if you're alone, or could actually help let the
group collaborate again," he said.
Engineers have said CIMON's concept 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. CIMON 2 also parallels HAL, the sentient computer in Stanley
Kubrick's "2001: A Space Odyssey" film.
SpaceX is the first private company to fly to the space station, a
$100 billion project of 15 nations. Along with CIMON 2, the cargo
aboard its 19th resupply mission to the orbital research lab
included 40 live mice that will show scientists how muscles change
in the microgravity of space.
(Editing by Scott Malone and Tom Brown)
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