Sunday, May 30, 2021

The robot smiled back

Columbia Engineering researchers use AI to teach robots to make appropriate reactive human facial expressions, an ability that could build trust between humans and their robotic co-workers and care-givers

COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF ENGINEERING AND APPLIED SCIENCE

Research News

New York, NY--May 27, 2021--While our facial expressions play a huge role in building trust, most robots still sport the blank and static visage of a professional poker player. With the increasing use of robots in locations where robots and humans need to work closely together, from nursing homes to warehouses and factories, the need for a more responsive, facially realistic robot is growing more urgent.

Long interested in the interactions between robots and humans, researchers in the Creative Machines Lab at Columbia Engineering have been working for five years to create EVA, a new autonomous robot with a soft and expressive face that responds to match the expressions of nearby humans. The research will be presented at the ICRA conference on May 30, 2021, and the robot blueprints are open-sourced on Hardware-X (April 2021).

"The idea for EVA took shape a few years ago, when my students and I began to notice that the robots in our lab were staring back at us through plastic, googly eyes," said Hod Lipson, James and Sally Scapa Professor of Innovation (Mechanical Engineering) and director of the Creative Machines Lab.

Lipson observed a similar trend in the grocery store, where he encountered restocking robots wearing name badges, and in one case, decked out in a cozy, hand-knit cap. "People seemed to be humanizing their robotic colleagues by giving them eyes, an identity, or a name," he said. "This made us wonder, if eyes and clothing work, why not make a robot that has a super-expressive and responsive human face?"

While this sounds simple, creating a convincing robotic face has been a formidable challenge for roboticists. For decades, robotic body parts have been made of metal or hard plastic, materials that were too stiff to flow and move the way human tissue does. Robotic hardware has been similarly crude and difficult to work with--circuits, sensors, and motors are heavy, power-intensive, and bulky.

VIDEO: https://youtu.be/1vBLI-q04kM
PROJECT WEBSITE: 
http://www.cs.columbia.edu/~bchen/aiface/

The first phase of the project began in Lipson's lab several years ago when undergraduate student Zanwar Faraj led a team of students in building the robot's physical "machinery." They constructed EVA as a disembodied bust that bears a strong resemblance to the silent but facially animated performers of the Blue Man Group. EVA can express the six basic emotions of anger, disgust, fear, joy, sadness, and surprise, as well as an array of more nuanced emotions, by using artificial "muscles" (i.e. cables and motors) that pull on specific points on EVA's face, mimicking the movements of the more than 42 tiny muscles attached at various points to the skin and bones of human faces.

"The greatest challenge in creating EVA was designing a system that was compact enough to fit inside the confines of a human skull while still being functional enough to produce a wide range of facial expressions," Faraj noted.


To overcome this challenge, the team relied heavily on 3D printing to manufacture parts with complex shapes that integrated seamlessly and efficiently with EVA's skull. After weeks of tugging cables to make EVA smile, frown, or look upset, the team noticed that EVA's blue, disembodied face could elicit emotional responses from their lab mates. "I was minding my own business one day when EVA suddenly gave me a big, friendly smile," Lipson recalled. "I knew it was purely mechanical, but I found myself reflexively smiling back."

Once the team was satisfied with EVA's "mechanics," they began to address the project's second major phase: programming the artificial intelligence that would guide EVA's facial movements. While lifelike animatronic robots have been in use at theme parks and in movie studios for years, Lipson's team made two technological advances. EVA uses deep learning artificial intelligence to "read" and then mirror the expressions on nearby human faces. And EVA's ability to mimic a wide range of different human facial expressions is learned by trial and error from watching videos of itself.

The most difficult human activities to automate involve non-repetitive physical movements that take place in complicated social settings. Boyuan Chen, Lipson's PhD student who led the software phase of the project, quickly realized that EVA's facial movements were too complex a process to be governed by pre-defined sets of rules. To tackle this challenge, Chen and a second team of students created EVA's brain using several Deep Learning neural networks. The robot's brain needed to master two capabilities: First, to learn to use its own complex system of mechanical muscles to generate any particular facial expression, and, second, to know which faces to make by "reading" the faces of humans.

To teach EVA what its own face looked like, Chen and team filmed hours of footage of EVA making a series of random faces. Then, like a human watching herself on Zoom, EVA's internal neural networks learned to pair muscle motion with the video footage of its own face. Now that EVA had a primitive sense of how its own face worked (known as a "self-image"), it used a second network to match its own self-image with the image of a human face captured on its video camera. After several refinements and iterations, EVA acquired the ability to read human face gestures from a camera, and to respond by mirroring that human's facial expression.

The researchers note that EVA is a laboratory experiment, and mimicry alone is still a far cry from the complex ways in which humans communicate using facial expressions. But such enabling technologies could someday have beneficial, real-world applications. For example, robots capable of responding to a wide variety of human body language would be useful in workplaces, hospitals, schools, and homes.

"There is a limit to how much we humans can engage emotionally with cloud-based chatbots or disembodied smart-home speakers," said Lipson. "Our brains seem to respond well to robots that have some kind of recognizable physical presence."

Added Chen, "Robots are intertwined in our lives in a growing number of ways, so building trust between humans and machines is increasingly important."


CAPTION

Data Collection Process: Eva is practicing random facial expressions by recording what it looks like from the front camera.

CREDIT

Creative Machines Lab/Columbia Engineering 

About the Study

The study is titled "Smile Like You Mean It: Driving Animatronic Robotic Face with Learned Models."

Authors are: Boyuan Chen, Yuhang Hu, Lianfeng Li, Sara Cummings, and Hod Lipson, Mechanical Engineering and Computer Science, Columbia Engineering.

The robot blueprint is titled "Facially Expressive Humanoid Robotic Face."

Authors of the robot blueprint paper are: Zanwar Faraj, Mert Selamet, Carlos Morales, Patricio Torres, Maimuna Hossain, Boyuan Chen, and Hod Lipson, Mechanical Engineering and Computer Science, Columbia Engineering.

The study was supported by National Science Foundation NRI 1925157 and DARPA MTO grant L2M Program HR0011-18-2-0020.

The authors declare no financial or other conflicts of interest.

LINKS:

Paper 1: https://arxiv.org/abs/2105.12724

Paper 2: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2468067220300262

VIDEO: https://youtu.be/1vBLI-q04kM

PROJECT WEBSITE: http://www.cs.columbia.edu/~bchen/aiface/

http://engineering.columbia.edu/
https://engineering.columbia.edu/faculty/hod-lipson
https://me.columbia.edu/
https://www.creativemachineslab.com/
http://www.cs.columbia.edu/~bchen/
https://www.zanwarfaraj.com/
https://www.cs.columbia.edu/

Columbia Engineering

Columbia Engineering, based in New York City, is one of the top engineering schools in the U.S. and one of the oldest in the nation. Also known as The Fu Foundation School of Engineering and Applied Science, the School expands knowledge and advances technology through the pioneering research of its more than 220 faculty, while educating undergraduate and graduate students in a collaborative environment to become leaders informed by a firm foundation in engineering. The School's faculty are at the center of the University's cross-disciplinary research, contributing to the Data Science Institute, Earth Institute, Zuckerman Mind Brain Behavior Institute, Precision Medicine Initiative, and the Columbia Nano Initiative. Guided by its strategic vision, "Columbia Engineering for Humanity," the School aims to translate ideas into innovations that foster a sustainable, healthy, secure, connected, and creative humanity.




HAPPY BIRTHDAY MIKHAIL BAKUNIN

 


Mikhail Alexandrovich Bakunin  30 May [O.S. 18 May] 1814 – 1 July 1876) was a Russian revolutionary anarchist, socialist and founder of collectivist anarchism. He is considered among the most influential figures of anarchism and a major founder of the revolutionary socialist and social anarchist tradition.[5] Bakunin's prestige as a revolutionary also made him one of the most famous ideologues in Europe, gaining substantial influence among radicals throughout Russia and Europe.

Mikhail Bakunin - Wikipedia






  • \

  • Bakunin and Marx: A Hundred Years’ Perspective

    "Introduction," pp. 15-29 in: Mikhail Bakunin: From Out of the Dustbin; Bakunin's Basic Writings, 1869-1871, ed. and trans. R.M. Cutler (Ann Arbor, Mich.: Ardis Publishers, 1985). Reprinted as: The Basic Bakunin: Writings, 1869-1871, Great Books in Philosophy (Buffalo, N.Y.: Prometheus Books, 1992).
  • God and the State : Mikhail Bakunin : Free Download ...

    https://archive.org/details/god_and_the_state_librivox

    2007-01-29 · Bakunin's most famous work, published in various lengths, this version is the most complete form of the work published hitherto. Originally titled "Dieu et l'état", Bakunin intended it to be part of the second portion to a larger work named "The Knouto-Germanic Empire and the Social Revolution" (Knouto-Germanic Empire is in reference to a treaty betwixt Russia and Germany at the …

  • Edward Hallett Carr - Michael Bakunin PDF

    https://anarcho-copy.org/copy/michael-bakunin

    Edward Hallett Carr - Michael Bakunin PDF dosyası indirme sayfası. önceki sonraki. Edward Hallett Carr / Michael Bakunin PDFpdf dosya bilgisi md5 İNDİR 2.5MB Mülkiyet Hırsızlıktır Copy (A) bu sayfa anarho-copy html generator tarafından oluşturulmuştur. 2021:05:01 14:30:59. pdf yükleme tarihi Wed, 12 Feb 2020 15:09:23 GMT ...

  • Works of Mikhail Bakunin 1873 - Marxists

    https://www.marxists.org/reference/archive/bakunin/works/1873/statism...

    Source: Bakunin on Anarchy, translated and edited by Sam Dolgoff, 1971; See Also: Conspectus of Bakunin's Statism and Anarchy by Karl Marx, 1874. Statism and Anarchy is the first completed volume of

  • "Science & Society", Mr A. H. Nimtz & Bakunin

    2016, "Science & Society", Mr A. H. Nimtz & Bakunin
    162 Views89 Pages
    An academic from the United States of America, August H. Nimtz, published in the journal "Science & Society" (July 2016) a short article entitled "Another 'side' to the Story" to which this text does not constitute an answer but rather a critical digression, which explains its length. Indeed, Mr. Nimtz's article condenses into three pages almost all of Marx's absurdities about Bakunin, and my text attempts to set the record straight, not from preconceived ideas but from documents of the time. My text also attempts to show that Mr. Nimtz's deeply rooted anti-Bakuninian prejudices, characteristic of Marxist historiography devoid of any critical examination of facts and documents, are a radical handicap that prevents analysis of the many points of convergence between the two men. The question is not whether social-democratic strategy or revolutionary syndicalist-type strategy (which was in fact the one advocated by Bakunin), was more effective in achieving immediate and temporary improvements in the living conditions of the working population; the question is: what would be the most effective way for this working population to collectively takeover all the machinery of society and to make it work so that it meets the needs of the entire population? The basis of the debate between Marx and Bakunin, between Marxism and Anarchism is there. Unfortunately, Marx’s stubborn refusal to discuss these issues, his obsession with accusing Bakunin of all kinds of evils, his systematic avoidance of debate, prevented the establishment of a real debate that could have led to a constructive synthesis.  (99+) (PDF) "Science & Society", Mr A. H. Nimtz & Bakunin | René Berthier - Academia.edu
  • Bakunin's Collectivist Anarchism

    202 Views19 Pages
    ​Mikhail Bakunin is now considered to be one of the greatest (if not the greatest) anarchist thinkers of the 19th century. Despite the fragmented nature of his writing, one finds in it those ideas which have become the foundation of modern collectivist anarchism. The task of this paper is to reconstruct and further explore those ideas. Firstly, we will explore Bakunin's conception of collectivist anarchism. This includes his collectivist conception of freedom, his critique of modern society, and his conception of collectivist anarchist social organization. Secondly, we will analyze James Guillaume's synthesis of Bakunin's ideas on social organization. We will finish by touching on the theory of Participatory Economics, a modern attempt to detail what collectivist anarchist society might look like.(99+) (PDF) Bakunin's Collectivist Anarchism | Simon B Monette - Academia.edu 
  • ANARCHISM, MARXISM, AND THE IDEOLOGICAL COMPOSITION OF THE CHICAGO IDEA

    2009, WorkingUSA
    30 Pages
  • Bakunin’s Anti-Jacobinism: ‘Secret Societies’ For Self-Emancipating Collectivist Social Revolution

    290 Views11 Pages
    The three terms describing the goal of Bakunin’s ‘secret societies’ in this article’s subtitle (‘self-emancipating’, ‘collectivist’ and ‘social revolution’) correspond to the three following ‘antis’. Anti-Blanquism corresponds to the self-emancipation that the secret society transmits throughout society (rather than being emancipation decreed and enacted from on high). Anti-Bebelism corresponds to its collectivist nature, in contrast with the authoritarian communist nature of such a decreed revolution, also following Bakunin’s famous distinction between the two at the 1868 Geneva Congress of the League of Peace and Freedom. Anti-Bernsteinism corresponds to the social revolution itself and particularly its internationalist nature. An understanding of how these strands are interwoven throughout the ‘infrastructure’ of Bakunin’s mature anarchist thought and activity requires an awareness of the early and enduring influence upon him by Fichte as well as Hegel. At the convergence of these strands is his anarchist concept of the purpose and activity of the secret revolutionary organisation, or ‘secret society’. (99+) (PDF) Bakunin’s Anti-Jacobinism: ‘Secret Societies’ For Self-Emancipating Collectivist Social Revolution | Robert M Cutler - Academia.edu
  • Genesis of German liberalism
  • “not reaching heaven and not touching the earth"
  • René Berthier
  • From Chapter 1 (revised) of Bakounine politique, révolution et contre
  • révolution en Europe centrale (Bakunin Policy: Revolution and Counter
  • Revolution in Central Europe), Éditions du Monde libertaire, 1991.
  • Bakunin is often accused, including by some anarchist authors or close to the
  • movement, of being "germanophobic". Of course, when a conviction is deeply rooted,
  • there is no point in trying to extract it. 
  • "Bakounine politique, révolution et contre révolution en Europe centrale" (Bakunin
  • Policy, Revolution and Counter-Revolution in Central Europe) does not deal with the
  • Marx-Bakunin opposition as it is usually presented in the First International. The book
  • attempts to show the crucial importance that his reflections on the history and destiny
  • of Germany have played on the formation of Bakunin's political thought. 
  • The Russian revolutionary had a fascination for this country; he was a remarkable
  • connoisseur of its literature, its music. He knew Mozart's "Don Giovanni" by heart. His
  • knowledge of German philosophy acquired in Berlin from one of Hegel's disciples was
  • recognized by all. All his life he tried to find the key to this mysterious nation whose
  • bourgeoisie was never able to make its revolution.
  • But Bakunin did not put all the Germans in the same boat. He never confused the
  • German bourgeoisie on the one hand, and the proletariat and peasantry on the other.
  • He never attributed to the German working class the defects he perceived in the
  • bourgeoisie. 
  • (99+) (PDF) Bakunin : Genesis of German liberalism | René Berthier - Academia.edu




  • Saturday, May 29, 2021

    THE UNBORN DO NOT HAVE HUMAN RIGHTS

    Thousands rally against abortion in Croatia
    NEITHER DO THE UNDEAD
    Issued on: 29/05/2021 -
    Anti-abortion protesters march through Croatia's capital Zagreb 
    Denis LOVROVIC AFP

    Zagreb (AFP)

    Thousands of anti-abortion demonstrators took to the streets on Saturday in Croatia, a largely Catholic country where human rights activists say reproductive rights are increasingly under threat.

    The marchers in capital Zagreb, most of whom did not wear masks, waived Croatian flags, sang patriotic songs and carried banners such as "Unborn lives matter, too".

    "It's our duty to advocate for protection of every human life, including unborn children", said Luka Hudincec, one of the organisers of the rally.

    Various left-wing and feminist groups opposed the march by standing on the sidewalk, chanting while wearing bloody aprons and carrying clothes hangers -- a reference to illegal abortion.

    The annual rally came only a day before local elections where polls overwhelmingly tip the left-green candidate to win over a conservative in Zagreb.


    "We expect the politicians who represent us on both local and national level to uphold the basic human right -- the right to live", one of the organisers who introduced himself as Stjepan said.

    Abortion is legal until the 10th week of pregnancy in Croatia under a 1978 law from when the country was still part of socialist Yugoslavia.

    But more and more doctors refuse to conduct the procedure on moral grounds, swayed by rising religious pressure.

    In 2017, the country's top court ruled that the current legislation is outdated, and rights groups fear this could pave the way for more restrictions.

    Nearly 90 percent of Croatia's 4.2 million people are Catholics and the Church plays a central role in society.

    © 2021 AFP
    China censors Lady Gaga, LGBT references from ‘Friends’ reunion episode

    Issued on: 29/05/2021 - 
    The original cast of the TV series 'Friends' is seen above. The series has a huge following among young people in China and is even recommended in schools as a way to learn English. © Lee Celano, AFP/file

    Text by:NEWS WIRES

    Chinese fans of the popular sitcom "Friends" were furious after censors cut guest stars Lady Gaga, Justin Bieber and Korean boyband BTS from the much-awaited reunion episode.


    When the one-off special of the beloved 1990s sitcom was streamed on three Chinese video platforms, cameos by the celebrities who have all incurred the wrath of the ruling Communist Party were removed from all versions.

    Lady Gaga was banned from touring China in 2016 after she met with the exiled Tibetan spiritual leader Dalai Lama, who has been labelled as a separatist by Beijing.

    Bieber has been blocked since 2014 when he posted a photo of himself at the controversial Yasukuni Shrine in Tokyo that honours Japan's war dead, including convicted war criminals from World War II.

    Boyband BTS angered the party last year when they omitted any reference to Chinese fighters who died during the Korean War when speaking about the "history of pain" in the region.

    Chinese fans were also quick to point out that local versions of "Friends: The Reunion" expunged all LGBTQ references from the special, which was several minutes shorter than the 104 minute show released worldwide on HBO Max on Thursday.

    Chinese streaming services iQiyi, Youku and Tencent Video did not answer AFP queries about what prompted the censorship.

    The sitcom about six white New Yorkers has a huge following among Chinese millennials and is even recommended in schools as a way to learn English.

    The show's popularity has also spawned Central Perk cafes in several Chinese cities, styled after the hangout regularly featured in the show.

    'Mangled'


    Angry fans took to social media to vent out their frustration at the censorship

    "I was waiting for weeks to watch the Friends reunion only to find that the version streamed in China was all mangled," wrote one user.

    "Why can't the censors just let us enjoy a sitcom?" asked another.

    Earning the wrath of Chinese authorities has become costly for entertainers after China became the world's box office last year surpassing the United States.

    Earlier this week, American wrestler and actor John Cena apologised after stirring a hornet's nest by referring to Taiwan as a country while promoting his latest movie "Fast and Furious 9." Beijing considers the democratic island a renegade province.

    (AFP)