A Japanese inventor's latest creation is a robot double of
himself.
Dr. Hiroshi Ishiguro tells CNN's Tokyo correspondent Kyung
Lah that he sees his creation, dubbed the Geminoid, partly as
an opportunity to have a presence when not actually present,
essentially being in two places at once, and also as a chance
to study human behavior along with furthering his knowledge
of androids.
"At first you may feel strange about the android,"
Ishiguro told Reuters. "However, once you are drawn into
a conversation, you will forget every difference and feel totally
comfortable to speak with it and look it in the eyes."
The Geminoid, controlled remotely by Ishiguro with mouth sensors
and a microphone, has over 50 sensors and motors concealed beneath
its skin, with compressed air pumped through its body to simulate
breathing.
Ishiguro, professor of robotics at Osaka University and director
of its Intelligent Robotics Laboratory, unveiled an earlier
model, known as Repliee Q1Expo, in 2005. "Repliee Q1Expo
is not like any robot you will have seen before, at least outside
of science-fiction movies," noted BBC News. Having come
about during a partnership with Tokyo robotics and entertainment
firm Kokoro, it was modeled after a Japanese newscaster. "I
have developed many robots before," Ishiguro said, "but
I soon realized the importance of its appearance. A human-like
appearance gives a robot a strong feeling of presence."
In time, he added, the time it would take for a person to realize
such a creation was a machine and not a human, could go from
a few seconds to, perhaps, ten minutes. "Consciously, it
is easy to see that she is an android, but unconsciously, we
react to the android as if she were a woman."
(ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW)

"If I could have one at the university, and one at ATR,"
Ishiguro quipped, "I would just do all my work from a hot-springs
resort."
The following video is from CNN's American Morning, broadcast
on November 26, 2008.