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A humanoid robot is a robot whose shape resembles that of a human being.[1] Their structure and components used vary depending on the set of tasks that they are designed to perform.[2] A robotic head who senses similar external stimuli as humans and whose design resembles a human head would also be considered a humanoid robot.[2]

History

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The concept of a humanoid robot was developed by many different cultures around the world. Some of the earliest accounts of the idea of humanoid automata date to the 4th century BCE in Greek mythologies and various religious and philosophical texts from China. Physical prototypes of humanoid automata were later created in the Middle East, Italy, Japan, and France.

Greece

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The Greek god of blacksmiths, Hephaestus, created several different humanoid automata in various myths. In Homer's Iliad, Hephaestus created golden handmaidens and imbued them with human-like voices to serve as speaking tools or instruments.[3] Another Greek myth details how Hephaestus crafted a giant bronze automaton named Talos to protect the island of Crete from invaders.[4]

China

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In the 3rd century BCE, a Taoist philosophical text called the Liezi, written by Chinese philosopher Lie Yukou, detailed the idea of a humanoid automaton. The text includes mention of an engineer named Yan Shi who created a life-size, human-like robot for the fifth king of the Chinese Zhou Dynasty, King Mu.[5] The robot was primarily constructed of leather and wood. It was capable of walking, singing, and moving all parts of its body.[5]

Middle East

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In the 13th century, a Muslim engineer named Ismail al-Jazari designed various humanoid automata. He created a waitress robot that would dispense drinks from a liquid reservoir and appear out of an automatic door to serve them.[6] Another automaton he created was used for hand washing to refill a basin with water after being drained.[7]

Italy

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Model of Leonardo's robot with inner workings.

In the 1400s, Leonardo da Vinci conceptualized a complex mechanical robot clad in a suit of armor, capable of sitting, standing, and independently moving its arms.[8] The entire robot was operated by a system of pulleys and cables.

Japan

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From the 17th to 19th centuries, the Japanese built humanoid automata called karakuri puppets. These puppets resembled dolls and were used for entertainment in theater and religious festivals.[9]

France

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In the 18th century, French inventor Jacques de Vaucanson created a significant humanoid automaton called The Flute Player. This wooden, human-sized robot was capable of playing various melodies with the flute. It consisted of a system of bellows, pipes, weights, and other mechanical components to simulate to the muscles necessary to play the flute.[10]

Ethics

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Attachment and Deceit

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Humans have long felt feelings of anthropomorphism toward inanimate objects.[11][12] These raise ethical concerns with humanoid robots in that humans may express more attachment toward humanoid robots than necessary, and robot designers can use this fact to take advantage of humans.[11][12] This is otherwise known as deceit, where robot makers design robots knowing that they have no emotions but still pretend to show feelings of attachments toward humans.[12]

Sex Robots and Ethics

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The use of humanoid robots as sex robots is another area of ethical concern.[11][12] There are issues regarding whether humans mistreating humanoid robots should be punished because these robots look and behave similar to humans.[12] Also, there are concerns that the mistreatment of humanoid robots such as female sex robots may lower the dignity of women.[12] This mistreatment may also affect the behavior of the humans doing these actions or of the people observing, especially children.[12]

Robot Rights

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The human-like nature of humanoid robots also raises the issue of the rights that robots will have in human society as as well as the humanoid robot's legal status.[12] Since humanoid robots are only machines, it is unclear who or what responsibility should go to if humanoid robots were to commit a crime.[12]

Uses

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Humanoid robots serve their purpose of mimicking human behavior to fulfill any number of roles in fields such as mechanics, medicine, entertainment, and research and development.[13]

Medical and Research Applications

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Humanoid robots are a valuable resource in the world of medicine and biotechnology, as well as other fields of research such as biomechanics and cognitive science.[13] They can be used as test subjects for the practice and development of personalized healthcare aids, essentially performing as robotic nurses for demographics such as the elderly.[14] Humanoid robots are also being used to develop complex prosthetics for individuals with physical disabilities such as missing limbs.[14] The WABIAN-2 is a new medical humanoid robot created to help patients in the rehabilitation of their lower limbs.[14]

Entertainment Applications

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Humanoid robots have had a long history in the realm of entertainment, from the conception and ideas in the story of Prometheus to the application and physical build of modern animatronics used for theme parks.[13] Current uses and development of humanoid robots in theme parks are focused on creating stuntronics.[15] Stuntronics are humanoid robots built for serving as stunt doubles, and are designed to simulate life-like, untethered, dynamic movement.[15]

Demonstrative Applications

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Though many real-world applications for humanoid robots are unexplored, their primary use is to demonstrate up and coming technologies.[16] Modern examples of humanoid robots, such as the Honda Asimo, are revealed to the public in order to demonstrate new technological advancements in motor skills, such as walking, climbing, and playing an instrument.[16] Other humanoid robots have been developed for household purposes, however excel only in single purpose skills and are far from autonomous.[16]

Humanoid Robots and Science Fiction

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Common themes for the depiction include how humanoid robots can help humans in society as well as how humanoid robots server as monsters or threats in society.[17] Some humanoid robots that occur in science fiction are C-3PO in Star Wars, David in Artificial Intelligence, Data in Star Trek, and the T-800 in Terminator.[17]

Science fiction has also played a role in detailing the effects of intelligent humanoid robots on society.[17] Science fiction can show artificial intelligence as being good or bad for society.[17] One humanoid robot that is depicted as good for society is Commander Data in Star Trek.[17] Opposite portrayals where humanoid robots are shown as scary or frightening are the T-800 in Terminator.[17]

Sensors

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A sensor is a device that measures some attribute of the world. Being one of the three primitives of robotics (besides planning and control), sensing plays an important role in robotic paradigms.

Sensors can be classified according to the physical process with which they work or according to the type of measurement information that they give as output. In this case, the second approach was used.[18]

Proprioceptive

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Proprioceptive sensors sense the position, the orientation and the speed of the humanoid's body and joints, along with other internal values.[19]

In human beings the otoliths and semi-circular canals (in the inner ear) are used to maintain balance and orientation.[20] In addition humans use their own proprioceptive sensors (e.g. touch, muscle extension, limb position) to help with their orientation. Humanoid robots use accelerometers to measure the acceleration, from which velocity can be calculated by integration;[21] tilt sensors to measure inclination; force sensors placed in robot's hands and feet to measure contact force with environment;[22] position sensors, that indicate the actual position of the robot (from which the velocity can be calculated by derivation)[23] or even speed sensors.

Exteroceptive

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An artificial hand holding a lightbulb

Arrays of tactels can be used to provide data on what has been touched. The Shadow Hand uses an array of 34 tactels arranged beneath its polyurethane skin on each finger tip.[24] Tactile sensors also provide information about forces and torques transferred between the robot and other objects.

Vision refers to processing data from any modality which uses the electromagnetic spectrum to produce an image.[25] In humanoid robots it is used to recognize objects and determine their properties. Vision sensors work most similarly to the eyes of human beings. Most humanoid robots use CCD cameras as vision sensors.

Sound sensors allow humanoid robots to hear speech and environmental sounds, and perform as the ears of the human being. Microphones are usually used for this task.

Actuators

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Actuators are the motors responsible for motion in the robot.[26]

Humanoid robots are constructed in such a way that they mimic the human body, so they use actuators that perform like muscles and joints, though with a different structure.[26] The actuators of humanoid robots can be either electric, pneumatic, hydraulic.[27][28] The actuators in humanoid robots should be have high power, low mass, and small dimensions.[28]

Electric Actuators

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Electric actuators are the most popular types of actuators in humanoid robots.[27] These actuators are smaller in size, and a single electric actuator may not produce enough power for a human-sized joint.[27] Therefore, it is common to use multiple electric actuators for a single joint in a humanoid robot.[27] An example of a humanoid robot using electric actuators is HRP-2.[28]

Hydraulic Actuators

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Hydraulic actuators produce higher power than electric actuators and pneumatic actuators and they have the ability to control the torque they produce better than other types of actuators.[28] However, they can become very bulky in size.[27][28] One solution that was made to counter the size issue were electro-hydrostatic actuators (EHA).[28] The most popular example of a humanoid robot using hydraulic actuators is the ATLAS robot made by Boston Dynamics.[28]

Pneumatic Actuators

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Pneumatic actuators operate on the basis of gas compressibility.[27][28] As they are inflated, they expand along the axis, and as they deflate, they contract. If one end is fixed, the other will move in a linear trajectory. A popular example of a pneumatic actuator is the Mac Kibben muscle.[28]

Planning and Control

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Planning in robots is the process of planning out motions and trajectories for the robot to carry out. [29] Control is the actual execution of these planned motions and trajectories.[29] In humanoid robots, the planning must carry out biped motions, meaning that robots should plan motions similar to a human.[30] Since one of the main uses of humanoid robots is to interact with humans, it is important for the planning and control mechanisms of humanoid robots to work in a variety of terrain and environments.[30]

The question of walking biped robots stabilization on the surface is of great importance.[31] Maintenance of the robot's gravity center over the center of bearing area for providing a stable position can be chosen as a goal of control. [31]

To maintain dynamic balance during the walk, a robot needs information about contact force and its current and desired motion.[30] The solution to this problem relies on a major concept, the Zero Moment Point (ZMP).[30]

Another characteristic of humanoid robots is that they move, gather information (using sensors) on the "real world" and interact with it.[32] They don't stay still like factory manipulators and other robots that work in highly structured environments.[32] To allow humanoids to move in complex environments, planning and control must focus on self-collision detection, path planning and obstacle avoidance.[32][33]

Humanoid robots do not yet have some features of the human body.[34] They include structures with variable flexibility, which provide safety (to the robot itself and to the people), and redundancy of movements, i.e. more degrees of freedom and therefore wide task availability.[34] Although these characteristics are desirable to humanoid robots, they will bring more complexity and new problems to planning and control.[35] The field of whole-body control deals with these issues and addresses the proper coordination of numerous degrees of freedom, e.g. to realize several control tasks simultaneously while following a given order of priority.[36][37]

Timeline of Developments

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Year Subject Notes
c. 250 BC Automaton Described in The Liezi.[38]
c. 50 AD Automata Greek mathematician Hero of Alexandria described a machine that automatically pours wine for party guests.[39]
1206 Al-Jazari described a band made up of humanoid automata which, according to Charles B. Fowler, performed "more than fifty facial and body actions during each musical selection."[40] Al-Jazari also created hand washing automata with automatic humanoid servants,[41][verification needed] and an elephant clock incorporating an automatic humanoid mahout striking a cymbal on the half-hour.[citation needed] His programmable "castle clock" also featured five musician automata which automatically played music when moved by levers operated by a hidden camshaft attached to a water wheel.[42]
1495 Leonardo's robot Leonardo da Vinci designs a humanoid automaton that looks like an armored knight.[43]
1738 The Flute Player Jacques de Vaucanson builds a life-size figure of a shepherd that could play twelve songs on the flute and The Tambourine Player that played a flute and a drum or tambourine.[44]
1774 Pierre Jacquet-Droz and his son Henri-Louis created the Draughtsman, the Musicienne and the Writer, a figure of a boy that could write messages up to 40 characters long.[45]
1898 Nikola Tesla publicly demonstrates his "automaton" technology by wirelessly controlling a model boat at the Electrical Exposition held at Madison Square Garden in New York City during the height of the Spanish–American War.[46]
1921 Czech writer Karel Čapek introduced the word "robot" in his play R.U.R. (Rossum's Universal Robots). The word "robot" comes from the word "robota", meaning, in Czech and Polish, "labour, drudgery".[43]
1927 Maschinenmensch The ("machine-human"), a gynoid humanoid robot, also called "Parody", "Futura", "Robotrix", or the "Maria impersonator" (played by German actress Brigitte Helm), one of the earliest humanoid robots ever to appear on film, is depicted in Fritz Lang's film Metropolis.
1928 Eric An electrical robot opens an exhibition of the Society of Model Engineers at London's Royal Horticultural Hall in London, and tours the world.[47]
1939 Elektro A humanoid robot built by the Westinghouse Electric Corporation[48]
1941-42 Three Laws of Robotics Isaac Asimov formulates the Three Laws of Robotics, used in his robot science fiction stories, and in the process of doing so, coins the word "robotics".[49]
1948 Cybernetics Norbert Wiener formulates the principles of cybernetics, the basis of practical robotics.[50]
1961 Unimate The first digitally operated and programmable non-humanoid robot, is installed on a General Motors assembly line to lift hot pieces of metal from a die casting machine and stack them. It was created by George Devol and constructed by Unimation, the first robot manufacturing company.[51]
1967 to 1972 WABOT-1 Waseda University initiated the WABOT project in 1967, and in 1972 completed the WABOT-1, the world's first full-scale humanoid intelligent robot.[52][53] It was the first android, able to walk, communicate with a person in Japanese (with an artificial mouth), measure distances and directions to the objects using external receptors (artificial ears and eyes), and grip and transport objects with hands.[54][55][56]
1969 D.E. Whitney publishes his article "Resolved motion rate control of manipulators and human prosthesis".[57]
1970 Zero Moment Point Miomir Vukobratović proposed a theoretical model to explain biped locomotion.[58]
1972 Powered exoskeleton Miomir Vukobratović and his associates at Mihajlo Pupin Institute build the first active anthropomorphic exoskeleton.[59]
1980 Marc Raibert established the MIT Leg Lab, which is dedicated to studying legged locomotion and building dynamic legged robots.[60]
1983 Greenman Using MB Associates arms, "Greenman" was developed by Space and Naval Warfare Systems Center, San Diego. It had an exoskeletal master controller with kinematic equivalency and spatial correspondence of the torso, arms, and head. Its vision system consisted of two 525-line video cameras each having a 35-degree field of view and video camera eyepiece monitors mounted in an aviator's helmet.[61]
1984 WABOT-2 At Waseda University, the WABOT-2 is created, a musician humanoid robot able to communicate with a person, read a normal musical score with his eyes and play tunes of average difficulty on an electronic organ.[54]
1985 WHL-11 Developed by Hitachi Ltd, WHL-11 is a biped robot capable of static walking on a flat surface at 13 seconds per step and it can also turn.[54]
1986 Honda E series Honda developed seven biped robots which were designated E0 (Experimental Model 0) through E6. E0 was in 1986, E1 – E3 were done between 1987 and 1991, and E4 - E6 were done between 1991 and 1993.[62]
1989 Manny A full-scale anthropomorphic robot with 42 degrees of freedom developed at Battelle's Pacific Northwest Laboratories in Richland, Washington, for the US Army's Dugway Proving Ground in Utah. It could not walk on its own but it could crawl, and had an artificial respiratory system to simulate breathing and sweating.[54]
1990 Tad McGeer showed that a biped mechanical structure with knees could walk passively down a sloping surface.[63]
1993 Honda P series Honda developed P1 (Prototype Model 1) through P3, an evolution from E series, with upper limbs. Developed until 1997.[62]
1995 Hadaly Developed in Waseda University to study human-robot communication and has three subsystems: a head-eye subsystem, a voice control system for listening and speaking in Japanese, and a motion-control subsystem to use the arms to point toward campus destinations.[64]
1995 Wabian A human-size biped walking robot from Waseda University.[64]
1996 Saika A light-weight, human-size and low-cost humanoid robot, was developed at Tokyo University. Saika has a two-DOF neck, dual five-DOF upper arms, a torso and a head. Several types of hands and forearms are under development also. Developed until 1998.[54]
1997 Hadaly-2 A humanoid robot designed in Waseda University which realizes interactive communication with humans. It communicates not only informationally, but also physically.[64]
2000 ASIMO Honda creates its 11th bipedal humanoid robot, able to run.[62]
2001 Qrio Sony unveils small humanoid entertainment robots, dubbed Sony Dream Robot (SDR). Renamed Qrio in 2003.[65]
2001 HOAP Fujitsu realized its first commercial humanoid robot named HOAP-1. Its successors HOAP-2 and HOAP-3 were announced in 2003 and 2005, respectively. HOAP is designed for a broad range of applications for R&D of robot technologies.[66]
2002 HRP-2 A biped walking robot built by the Manufacturing Science and Technology Center (MSTC) in Tokyo.[67]
2003 JOHNNIE An autonomous biped walking robot built at the Technical University of Munich. The main objective was to realize an anthropomorphic walking machine with a human-like, dynamically stable gait.[68]
2003 Actroid A robot with realistic silicone "skin" developed by Osaka University in conjunction with Kokoro Company Ltd.[69]
2004 Persia Iran's first humanoid robot, was developed using realistic simulation by researchers of Isfahan University of Technology in conjunction with ISTT.[70]
2004 KHR-1 A programmable bipedal humanoid robot introduced in June 2004 by a Japanese company Kondo Kagaku.
2005 PKD Android A conversational humanoid robot made in the likeness of science fiction novelist Philip K Dick, was developed as a collaboration between Hanson Robotics, the FedEx Institute of Technology, and the University of Memphis.[71]
2005 Wakamaru A Japanese domestic robot made by Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, primarily intended to provide companionship to elderly and disabled people.[72]
2005 Actroid The Geminoid series is a series of ultra-realistic humanoid robots developed by Hiroshi Ishiguro of ATR and Kokoro in Tokyo. The original one, Geminoid HI-1 was made at its image. Followed Geminoid-F in 2010 and Geminoid-DK in 2011.[73]
2006 Nao A small open source programmable humanoid robot developed by Aldebaran Robotics, in France. Widely used by worldwide universities as a research platform and educational tool.[73]
2006 RoboTurk Designed and realized by Dr Davut Akdas and Dr Sabri Bicakci at Balikesir University. This Research Project Sponsored By The Scientific And Technological Research Council Of Turkey (TUBITAK) in 2006. RoboTurk is successor of biped robots named "Salford Lady" and "Gonzalez" at university of Salford in the UK. It is the first humanoid robot supported by Turkish Government.[74]
2006 REEM-A The first fully autonomous European biped humanoid robot, designed to play chess with the Hydra Chess engine. The first robot developed by PAL Robotics, it was also used as a walking, manipulation, speech and vision development platform.[75]
2006 iCub A biped humanoid open source robot for cognition research.[76]
2006 Mahru A network-based biped humanoid robot developed in South Korea.[77]
2007 TOPIO A ping pong playing robot developed by TOSY Robotics JSC.[78]
2007 Twendy-One A robot developed by the WASEDA University Sugano Laboratory for home assistance services. It is not biped, as it uses an omni-directional mobile mechanism.[79]
2008 Justin A humanoid robot developed by the German Aerospace Center (DLR).[80]
2008 KT-X The first international humanoid robot developed as a collaboration between the five-time consecutive RoboCup champions, Team Osaka, and KumoTek Robotics.[81]
2008 Nexi The first mobile, dexterous and social robot, makes its public debut as one of TIME magazine's top inventions of the year.[82] The robot was built through a collaboration between the MIT Media Lab Personal Robots Group,[83] UMass Amherst and Meka robotics.[84][85]
2008 Salvius The first open source humanoid robot built in the United States is created.[86]
2008 REEM-B The second biped humanoid robot developed by PAL Robotics. It has the ability to autonomously learn its environment using various sensors and carry 20% of its own weight.[87]
2008 Surena It had a height of 165 centimetres and weight of 60 kilograms, and is able to speak according to predefined text. It also has remote control and tracking ability.[88]
2009 HRP-4C A Japanese domestic robot made by National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology, shows human characteristics in addition to bipedal walking.[89]
2009 SURALP Turkey's first dynamically walking humanoid robot is developed by Sabanci University in conjunction with Tubitak.[90]
2009 Kobian A robot developed by Waseda University can walk, talk and mimic emotions.[91]
2009 DARwIn-OP An open source robot developed by ROBOTIS in collaboration with Virginia Tech, Purdue University, and University of Pennsylvania. This project was supported and sponsored by NSF.[92]
2010 Robonaut 2 A very advanced humanoid robot by NASA and General Motors. It was part of the payload of Shuttle Discovery on the successful launch February 24, 2011. It is intended to do spacewalks for NASA.[93]
2010 HRP-4C National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology demonstrate their humanoid robot singing and dancing along with human dancers.[94]
2010 HRP-4 National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology demonstrates the humanoid robot HRP-4 which is known for performing very natural movements similar to humans.[95]
2010 REEM A humanoid service robot with a wheeled mobile base. Developed by PAL Robotics, it can perform autonomous navigation in various surroundings and has voice and face recognition capabilities.[96]
2011 Auriga Robot developed by Ali Özgün HIRLAK and Burak Özdemir in 2011 at University of Cukurova. Auriga is the first brain controlled robot, designed in Turkey. Auriga can service food and medicine to paralysed people by patient's thoughts. EEG technology is adapted for manipulation of the robot. The project was supported by Turkish Government.[97]
2011 ASIMO In November Honda unveiled its second generation Honda Asimo Robot. The all new Asimo is the first version of the robot with semi-autonomous capabilities.[98]
2012 COMAN The Advanced Robotics Department in Italian Institute of Technology released its first version of the COmpliant huMANoid robot (COMAN) which is designed for robust dynamic walking and balancing in rough terrain.[99]
2012 NimbRo The Autonomous Intelligent Systems Group of University of Bonn, Germany, introduces the Humanoid TeenSize Open Platform NimbRo-OP.[100]
2013 TORO The German Aerospace Center (DLR) presents the humanoid robot TORO (TOrque-controlled humanoid RObot).[101]
2013 On December 20–21, 2013 DARPA Robotics Challenge ranked the top 16 humanoid robots competing for the US$2 million cash prize. The leading team, SCHAFT, with 27 out of a possible score of 30 was bought by Google.[102]
2013 REEM-C PAL Robotics launches REEM-C the first humanoid biped robot developed as a robotics research platform 100% ROS based.[103]
2013 Poppy The first open-source 3D-printed humanoid robot. Bio-inspired, with legs designed for biped locomotion. Developed by the Flower Departments at INRIA.[104]
2014 Manav India's first 3D printed humanoid robot developed in the laboratory of A-SET Training and Research Institutes by Diwakar Vaish (head Robotics and Research, A-SET Training and Research Institutes).[105]
2014 Pepper robot After the acquisition of Aldebaran, SoftBank Robotics releases a robot available for everyone.[106]
2014 Nadine A female humanoid social robot designed in Nanyang Technological University, Singapore, and modelled on its director Professor Nadia Magnenat Thalmann. Nadine is a socially intelligent robot which returns greetings, makes eye contact, and remembers all the conversations it has had.[107][108]
2016 Sophia A humanoid robot developed by "Hanson Robotics", Hong Kong, and modelled after Audrey Hepburn. Sophia has artificial intelligence, visual data processing and facial recognition.[109]
2016 OceanOne Developed by a team at Stanford University, led by computer science professor Oussama Khatib, completes its first mission, diving for treasure in a shipwreck off the coast of France, at a depth of 100 meters. The robot is controlled remotely, has haptic sensors in its hands, and artificial intelligence capabilities.[110]
2017 TALOS PAL Robotics launches TALOS,[111] a fully electrical humanoid robot with joint torque sensors and EtherCAT communication technology that can manipulate up to 6 kg payload in each of its grippers.[112]
2018 Rashmi Robot A multilingual realistic humanoid robot was launched in India by Ranjit Shrivastav having emotional interpretation capabilities [113]
2020 Vyommitra A female-looking spacefaring humanoid robot being developed by the Indian Space Research Organisation to function on-board the Gaganyaan, a crewed orbital spacecraft. [114]
2020 Epi Epi, a humanoid robot, was developed by the Cognitive Science Robotics Group at Lund University. Epi was designed for use in developmental robotics experiments, and therefore has a functionality focussed on allowing study of cognitive development. The robot is controlled by the Ikaros system.[115]
2020 Robot Shalu Homemade Artificially Intelligent, Indian Multilingual Humanoid Robot, made-up of waste materials, that can speak 9 Indian and 38 foreign languages (total 47 languages), developed by Dinesh Kunwar Patel, Computer Science teacher, Kendriya Vidyalaya Mumbai, India. Shalu can recognize a person and remember them, identify many objects, solve mathematical problems, give horoscopes and weather reports, teach in a classroom, conduct a quiz, and do many other things.[116]

Honda humanoid robot[117]

Development of a new humanoid robot WABIAN-2[14]

Humanoid robot HRP-3[118]

Humanoid Robots[119]

An Overview of Humanoid Robots Technologies[28]

Sophia[120]

Humanoid Robots: Historical Perspective, Overview, and Scope[13]

A Software Architecture for Generally Intelligent Humanoid Robotics[121]

Robovie: an interactive humanoid robot[122]

On Learning, Representing, and Generalizing a Task in a Humanoid Robot[123]

Telesuit: design and implementation of an immersive user-centric telepresence control suit[124]

Elon Musk unveils Tesla Bot, a humanoid robot that uses vehicle AI[125]

Stuntronics[15]

Atlas[126]

Optimization-based locomotion planning, estimation, and control design for the atlas humanoid robot[127]

Overview of humanoid robots - describes applications[16]

The da Vinci Robot[8]

Occurences in science fiction [17]

Artificial intelligence in Humanoid Robots - Forbes[128]

Cognitive development robotics[129]

Humanoid Robots- A new kind of tool[130]

Science and Civilisation in China: Volume 2, History of Scientific Thought[5]

Ancient Greek Ideas on Speech, Language, and Civilization[3]

Robot Evolution: The Development of Anthrobotics[7]

Ancient Myths (Talos)[4]

Jacques Robots[10]

Karakuri puppets[9]

References

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