Microsoft, Google, Qualcomm among sponsors of project Robo Brain

Cornell University, along with its partners at UC Berkeley, Brown University, and Stanford University, is developing a "robot brain" that can teach other robots how to do household chores, among other things. The undertaking, aptly called Robo Brain, has earned the support of many large organizations, including the National Science Foundation, Office of Naval Research Science and Technology, National Robotics Initiative, Google, Microsoft, Qualcomm, and the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation.

"Robo Brain is a large-scale computational system that learns from publicly available Internet resources, computer simulations, and real-life robot trials," the group says in the Robo Brain website. "It accumulates everything robotics into a comprehensive and interconnected knowledge base. Applications include prototyping for robotics research, household robots, and self-driving cars."

Basically,what the computer scientists are trying to achieve is to have a central system containing the data for robotic "skills" that can be used in or by other robots. As explained by Engadget, companies or robot developers can access Robo Brain online and download the robotic skill that they need for their machines.

"If a robot encounters a situation it hasn't seen before, it can query Robo Brain in the cloud," robot learning and project lead Ashutosh Saxena said in a statement and quoted by CBS News.

The developers of the system are tackling multiple challenges in robotics, namely: machine learning; large-scale data processing; perception; artificial intelligence and reasoning systems; robotics and automations; embodiment; and language and dialogue.

According to the CBS News report, Robo Brain is now processing 100 million manuals, 120,000 YouTube videos, and one billion photographs.

Newsletter Stay up to date with Christian Today
News
Holy Land risks becoming 'Christian Disneyland'
Holy Land risks becoming 'Christian Disneyland'

Anti-Christian sentiment from the Jewish community “can no longer be considered marginal”.

Is Donald Trump religious?
Is Donald Trump religious?

New figures from Pew Research Center suggest that most Americans believe President Trump is not a very religious person.

Why the ‘War Cry’ still sounds on Britain’s high streets
Why the ‘War Cry’ still sounds on Britain’s high streets

When Queen Victoria sat on the British throne, and Benjamin Disraeli was her prime minister, a Christian newspaper was launched that can still be found on the nation’s streets nearly 150 years later.

Enoch Burke saga continues as hearing collapses
Enoch Burke saga continues as hearing collapses

The Christian school teacher has spent over 650 days in prison after continuing to turn up to his former school despite a court order barring him from the premises.