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Japan Mixes Robotics With Tea Time

By YURI KAGEYAMA
The Associated Press
Wednesday, February 28, 2007; 1:12 PM

TOKYO -- Japan is pretty serious about robotics. If the droids are going to fit in, they probably need to learn the Japanese custom of serving tea.

Fortunately, researchers at the University of Tokyo are exploring just that. In a demonstration this week, a humanoid with camera eyes made by Kawada Industries Inc. poured tea from a bottle into a cup.


A humanoid wearing an apron picks up a cup of tea after University of Tokyo Professor Tomomasa Sato drank it during a demonstration at the campus in Tokyo Wednesday, Feb. 28, 2007. In the demonstration led by Sato, a robot with camera eyes made by Japanese machinery maker Kawada Industries Inc. poured tea into the cup and another robot on wheels, shown in this photo, delivered it to Sato, then rinsed the cup after taking it back to the kitchen sink in an experimental room, which includes sensors embedded in the floor and sofa, as well as monitor cameras on the ceiling, to simulate living with robotic technology. (AP Photo/Katsumi Kasahara)
A humanoid wearing an apron picks up a cup of tea after University of Tokyo Professor Tomomasa Sato drank it during a demonstration at the campus in Tokyo Wednesday, Feb. 28, 2007. In the demonstration led by Sato, a robot with camera eyes made by Japanese machinery maker Kawada Industries Inc. poured tea into the cup and another robot on wheels, shown in this photo, delivered it to Sato, then rinsed the cup after taking it back to the kitchen sink in an experimental room, which includes sensors embedded in the floor and sofa, as well as monitor cameras on the ceiling, to simulate living with robotic technology. (AP Photo/Katsumi Kasahara) (Katsumi Kasahara - AP)

Then another robot on wheels delivered the cup of tea in an experimental room that has sensors embedded in the floor and sofa as well as cameras on the ceiling, to simulate life with robot technology.

"A human being may be faster, but you'd have to say `Thank you,'" said University of Tokyo professor Tomomasa Sato. "That's the best part about a robot. You don't have to feel bad about asking it to do things."

Sato believes Japan, a rapidly aging society where more than a fifth of the population is 65 or older, will lead the world in designing robots to care for the elderly, sick and bedridden.

Already, monitoring technologies, such as sensors that automatically turn on lights when people enter a room, are becoming widespread in Japan. The walking, child-size Asimo from Honda Motor Co. greets people at showrooms. NEC Corp. has developed a smaller companion robot-on-wheels called Papero. A seal robot available since 2004 can entertain the elderly and others in need of fuzzy companionship.

Sato says his experimental room is raising awareness about privacy questions that may arise when electronic devices monitor a person's movements down to the smallest detail. On the bright side, the tea-pouring humanoid has been programmed to do the dishes.


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