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| More Humanoid Robots | ||||
| Home | Asimo | PSeries | QRIO | HRP |
| HOAP | Arne/Arnea | Iguana | KHR | SILF |
| Toyota | Morph 3 | Gallop | Nojump | Other |
 - plyojump_com_files/quro_throwing_ball.jpg)
Sony's humanoid QRIO (formerly SDR) robot can
dance, react to its environment and get up from a fall. Amazing small,
self-contained robot! Sony's goal? - a personal
entertainer.
QRIO pictures
Links to movies of QRIO running, throwing a ball, and dancing! (Windows Media)
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| Running in place | Throwing a ball | Extended run |
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| Sideways run | Fan dance | Run and rotate |
QRIO at Robodex 2002
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| Sony Corp.'s small biped entertainment robots perform a synchronized dance at Robodex 2002 (movies below) | Picture of SDR-4x in its Borg-like power alcove at Robodex 2003 |
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| The two pictures above show the dynamic balance of the Sony robot. Despite its small size, it has the same stabilization system as larger humanoid robots. On the left, the Sony robot adjusts to a surfboard-like rotating platform. On the right, a human pushes the Sony robot backward. It responds by adjusting its balance and walking backward. | |
| Links to Movie (QuickTime, Wimdows Media, click on images) | |
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| Additional Movies (click on hyperlinks) | |
| Sony robot dances and gets up after it falls | Introduction |
| Sony Robot Does Tah Chi | Second Movie |
| Video showing other robots, but a shot at the end showing Sony Robot in the famous "God and Adam" hands pose | Third Movie |
| Fourth Movie (singing) | |
| Fifth Movie (dancing) | |
| More Photos | |
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| SDR-4x performs a ribbondance at Robodex 2003 | |
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| A shot of the hand. | A shot of the feet. |
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Sony SDR-3X - Robodex 2001 | |
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| Sony Corporation originally developed a small biped
walking robot "SDR" (3X and 4Xprototype). By synchronizing the
movements of 24 joints on its body, the robot can perform basic
movements such as walking and changing direction, as well as getting
up, balancing on one leg, kicking a ball and dancing. The "brain" of
the SDR builds "occupancy grids" of the visual environment similar
to the systems of Hans Moravec. Photos of the occupancy grids look
like Moravec's work from 7-8 years ago. The robot uses the same OPEN-R architecture as Sony's four-legged autonomous Entertainment Robot "AIBO". Two technologies applying the OPEN-R architecture, the "actuator" that moves the joints and "Whole Body Coordinated Dynamic Control" for real-time control of the joints realize the biped walking motion of the SDR-4X. To realize stable walking movement, the Zero Moment Point (ZMP) where the combined force of both the inertia and body weight meet, must be judged against whether balance is possible on the surface that is being walked upon.The SDR-3X uses two RISC processors for thinking and motion control. Information gathered from a CCD camera, microphone, posture sensors and touch sensors on the bottom of the feet are processed to synchronize movements of the body joints. | |
"There is only one condition in which we can
imagine managers not needing subordinates, and masters not needing slaves.
This would be if every machine could work by itself, at the word of
command or by intelligent anticipation."