Japan’s Humanoid Robots Nearly Ready for Primetime?

Economy Science Technology Society

After a stagnant period, Japan’s robot industry is getting a second wind. One researcher at the forefront of R&D in this field is Shimizu Masaharu of the Chiba Institute of Technology. Here he shares his views on the current state of robotic technology and the outlook for the future.

Japanese Robot Wins Robotics Challenge

While Japan has been making progress in refining robots to respond to nuclear disasters, based on the needs that came into clear focus after the March 2011 disaster, the United States has been focusing on R&D to make its multipurpose humanoid robots more effective in disaster-relief efforts. Near the end of 2013, the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency in the United States hosted the DRC, or DARPA Robotics Challenge competition. The goal was to promote the development of robots capable of reacting to a crisis arising from a manmade disaster, such as a nuclear accident. The robots entered in the competition must perform eight different tasks, including the operation of a motor vehicle. In other words, the competition assumes that these robots will have near-human capabilities.

Shimizu traveled to the United States to observe the competition and shared his impressions: “The winner at DRC was a robot developed by Schaft Inc., a venture firm launched at the University of Tokyo. Although the robot has two arms and two legs, unlike a human being, there is no distinction between its front and back. This shape allows it to flexibly carry out operations at a disaster site. But during the competition the robot struggled with the task of walking on rubble, which took it much longer than the existing crawler-type robots needed.”

“Looking at the results in general, with the exception of the ATLAS humanoid robot that was on loan from DARPA, most of the top performing teams were designers of robots that were not modeled after human beings, such as an ape-like robot capable of walking on all fours or rolling on crawlers attached to its limbs. The competition clarified how much improvement is needed in various aspects for the humanoid robots. At the same time, though, the performance of the Schaft robot gave me the sense that Japan’s humanoid technologies are quite advanced. I should mention that the company was bought out by Google in November 2013.”

The robot designed by Schaft Inc. is able to operate a motor vehicle. © DARPA.

Benefits of Joint US-Japan Development

Japan and the United States have reached an agreement on a joint R&D and verification project for disaster-relief robots. This agreement is also intended to encourage Japanese initiatives to develop robots for DRC competition. “The Americans are aware of the high level of Japan’s humanoid technologies,” notes Shimizu, “and they’re keen to incorporate those technologies.”

The merit from the American perspective of acquiring those technologies is clear, but there are also benefits to Japan from this collaboration, as Shimizu explains: “There’s considerable value in the DRC competition, which effectively lets us borrow the test course it is based on. It allows us to carry out demonstrations of a variety of tasks on a large scale and provides a way to conduct benchmark tests. This can act as a springboard for accelerating the pace of robot development.”

Work is underway to prepare for the next competition. “In response to an appeal from Japan’s Ministry of Economy, Trade, and Industry, the University of Tokyo, Osaka University, Kobe University, and the Chiba Institute of Technology have set up a joint project team to develop a two-armed, two-legged humanoid robot to compete at DRC in June 2015. I think that some of the disaster-relief know-how we’ve acquired through the development of Sakura No. 1 and No. 2 will be quite useful toward that effort.”

US Companies’ Robot Buying Spree

Over the past few years, one new robot venture after another has been bought out by other companies, most notably Google. This reflects the acceleration of investment in robot technology among the American IT giants and influential venture capital funds. Indeed, Shimizu says that the United States is undergoing a sort of “robot boom” at the moment.

“This seems to be driven by the idea among US companies that robotic technology is on the verge of blossoming. Meanwhile, in Japan, up to now we’ve seen considerable upfront investment by the private and public sector for government projects and other initiatives. But despite Japan taking the lead in this area, all this investment has yet to lead to the practical application and commercialization of robots. This makes investors hesitate about continuing to focus aggressively on the sector.”

Japan has also been slow to perceive the potential of robot technology in areas that are useful to people’s everyday lives. By contrast, in 2002 the US company iRobot launched the automatic Roomba vacuum cleaner, which became a hit product worldwide. Japanese firms like Toshiba and Sharp have only recently begun to develop their own cleaning robots.

On June 5, 2014, SoftBank Chairman Son Masayoshi (right) and the CEO of its affiliate Aldebaran Robotics, Bruno Maisonnier, unveiled Pepper, a robot capable of reading emotions. © Jiji Press.

But Shimizu also points out that SoftBank’s 2012 acquisition of French company Aldebaran Robotics to develop the robot Pepper has helped to energize the market for household robots and given a major boost to Japan’s robot industry. “It was reassuring to know that among Japanese investors and executives, there was someone able to perceive that robot technology is about to take off.”

Shimizu wants to preserve his own sense of excitement at the creativity of robot development, which offers the possibility of bringing something new into the world and setting it into motion.

“Some people think the service robot industry is sluggish because it’s hard to land a budget for development unless you can combine existing technologies to create useful products that match the needs of consumers, at which point the market springs into action. All that is true, but nothing new will ever emerge from such calculations alone. The optimal approach, I think, is for the researchers themselves to think closely about what is out there in the world that excites them, and then create something that excites other people, too. I remember the excitement I felt when I first entered the field of robot R&D. It seems to me the environment to support that feeling is finally in place.”

(Originally written in Japanese by staff editor Itakura Kimie based on an August 19, 2014, interview with Shimizu Masaharu. Banner photo © Yamada Shinji.)
▼Further reading
Leading the World in Humanoid Robotics
Understanding Humans to Improve Robot Technology
Fukushima’s Radioactivity-Proof Cleanup Robot
Meet Quince, the robot helping to clear up Fukushima Daiichi
Famous Faces
Some Hard-Working Celebrities of the Robot World

Related Tags

disaster robot nuclear disaster humanoid Chiba Institute of Technology rescue

Other articles in this report