
Japan’s Robots: Becoming More Human
Leading the World in Humanoid Robotics
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Making Humanoid Robots Truly Useful
INTERVIEWER What are your objectives with your research into humanoid robots? Could they help to improve society?
TAKANISHI Even though half a century has elapsed since Katō began his research, I don’t think there are any truly humanoid robots being used anywhere in the world. Unlike science, which seeks to explain the unknown, the goal of engineering is to work out how to design things that are useful in order to make people happy. As one person walking in the footsteps of Katō, I believe that humanoid robotic technology really has to reach a stage where it has useful applications. At the moment, in addition to research into bipedal robotics, I’m putting a lot of energy into developing technology that will really make a difference in the world.
(Above) The suture skill evaluation simulator. The score appears on the connected computer screen. (Below) It is now possible to use a machine to practice endoscopies.
For example, it’s become increasingly clear that humanoid robots can improve the proficiency of health professionals. I’ve been working with a business in Kyoto that is developing a simulator used for medical training. Over the past few years we’ve jointly developed various products.
One of these is the suture skill evaluation simulator, which is artificial skin that measures how well a surgeon can sew stitches. Using a system based on input from sensors, it produces a score between 0 and 100. We’ve been selling the product for two years now.
Here’s another example. Since general anesthetic can cause respiratory problems during surgery, a tube is inserted into the lungs beforehand. It is said that this is an extremely difficult procedure to perform, so surgeons in Japan and all over the world practice on dolls. However, using these dolls, there is no way to tell if the force you applied would have ruptured the vocal chords. All that can be confirmed is whether the tube has successfully been inserted into the lungs. We began joint development with the aim of making something that could provide a numerical evaluation in a similar manner to the suture skill evaluation simulator. We’ll probably release this product by the end of 2012. And there’s another similar machine now in development that will help to train dentists.
I expect that medical machinery will be the first field where humanoid robot technology will be extremely useful in many different circumstances.
Discovering the Nature of the Human Form
INTERVIEWER Have there been results that you haven’t expected from your research into humanoid robots?
TAKANISHI After many years of research into bipedal robots, I thought for a moment, “The robot can walk fairly well now so I’d like to make it more useful.” The first thing that came to mind was wheelchairs. Stairs, or anything that involves stepping up and down, are still almost impossible for wheelchairs to negotiate. The reason that stairs are shaped the way they are is because humans walk on two legs. Horses and other four-legged animals find stairs difficult to climb and descend. When I realized this, I came up with the idea of making a wheelchair with two legs. I took the idea to the company that had jointly developed the training machine for dentists, and we started working on a robot that carries people and that can climb up and down stairs.
The problem was that if the robot has to carry a person in addition to its own weight, it doesn’t have enough power. When we encountered this problem, it occurred to us that we could mimic human muscles. The muscles in our body are composed of fibers arranged in parallel. Thanks to this arrangement, we can move extremely quickly, powerfully, and with a great deal of accuracy. By mimicking this construction, we managed to make a robot that weighs 65 kilograms with the battery included, and that can walk while carrying a person weighing up to 80 kilograms.
We had a solution to the power problem, but there was another issue to deal with. Every user’s weight and center of gravity differs, and this caused the robot to pitch and sway while walking, making it very likely to fall over. We developed technology that allows the robot to adjust to the person using it and remain upright. We took this two-legged wheelchair to an exhibition in Los Angeles in 2007 and invited people to try it. Over several days around 170 people used the wheelchair and not one person toppled the machine.
Katō believed that from a robotic engineering point of view, to successfully replicate human functions and movement is to better understand how humans work. I’ll give you an example. Robots used to have legs that poked abruptly and directly out of their bodies. But if you look at the human form, you see that we have a pelvis in between. By including the functionality of the pelvis into the robot, we can make the knees function more naturally as a result. What Katō meant, in other words, was that you can trace the relationship between the construction of the human body and the way that it walks.
In order to construct a humanoid robot, we’re always looking at the human body while doing our research. During the development of the two-legged wheelchair, I realized that the information robotics research has accumulated on the human body is of great use in building a robot that is useful to humans.
(Interviewed by Harano Jōji, publisher of Nippon.com, in May 2012. Photographs by Matsuda Tadao.)
History of Robotics Research (Edited by Takanishi Atsuo)
3rd Century BC | Talos, the giant man of bronze, appears in Greek mythology. |
25 BC | The theory is born that all tools and machines are projections of the human body’s organs to the outside world. The start of technology that mimics the human form. |
1st Century | Automatic doors and other automatic machines are constructed using the principle of siphons. |
12th Century | Clock technology is improved and more accurate machines are constructed. |
17th Century | The era of automatons (moving dolls) in the West. |
The era of karakuri (wind-up dolls) in Japan. | |
19th Century | Birth of the idea that if an accurate clock can be built then the same principles might be used to build a human. |
Invention of the steam engine; the Industrial Revolution. | |
Birth of the term android, meaning a machine that looks just like a human. | |
20th Century | Invention of computers. |
Industrial robots patented (United States, 1954). | |
World’s first humanoid robot WABOT-1 is developed (Japan, 1973). | |
The market for industrial robots grows rapidly. 1980 is known as “year one” for robotics in Japan. |
Related Tags
robot WABOT-1 KOBIAN-R karakuri Waseda humanoid robotics Takanishi Atsuo Kato Ichiro Talos automaton automata android modern mechanical engineering wheelchair bipedal medical machinery Harano Joji Matsuda Tadao Karel Capek Rossum