Robot creativity: humanlike behaviour in the robot-robot interaction
Artificial Intelligence development is mainly directed toward imitating human reasoning and performing different tasks. For that purpose, related software and program solution where artificial intelligence is used have mostly thinking abilities. However, there are many questions to answer in ongoin...
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2020
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my.uthm.eprints.28422022-01-02T06:20:59Z http://eprints.uthm.edu.my/2842/ Robot creativity: humanlike behaviour in the robot-robot interaction Predrag, K. Nikolic Md Tomari, Mohd Razali TJ210.2-211.47 Mechanical devices and figures. Automata. Ingenious mechanisms. Robots (General) Artificial Intelligence development is mainly directed toward imitating human reasoning and performing different tasks. For that purpose, related software and program solution where artificial intelligence is used have mostly thinking abilities. However, there are many questions to answer in ongoing AI research, especially when we come to the point which is addressing humanlike behaviour and reasoning triggered by emotions. In this paper, we are presenting an interactive installation Botorikko: Machine Create State, which is part of the Syntropic Counterpoints art/research project. We are exposing AI cyber clones to some of the fundamental questions for humankind and challenge their creativity. The robots are trained by using the publications Machiavelli and Sun Tzu and confronted to the crucial questions related to moral, ethic, strategy, politics, diplomacy, war etc. We are using a recurrent neural network (RNN) and robot-robot interaction to trigger unsupervised robot creativity and humanlike behaviour on generated machine-made content. Springer Nature Santos, H. 2020 Book Section PeerReviewed text en http://eprints.uthm.edu.my/2842/1/Robot%20creativity%20humanlike.pdf Predrag, K. Nikolic and Md Tomari, Mohd Razali (2020) Robot creativity: humanlike behaviour in the robot-robot interaction. In: ICST Institute for Computer Sciences, Social Informatics and Telecommunications Engineering 2020. Springer Nature, pp. 349-357. ISBN 978-3-030-51005-3 |
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TJ210.2-211.47 Mechanical devices and figures. Automata. Ingenious mechanisms. Robots (General) Predrag, K. Nikolic Md Tomari, Mohd Razali Robot creativity: humanlike behaviour in the robot-robot interaction |
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Artificial Intelligence development is mainly directed toward imitating human reasoning and performing different tasks. For that purpose, related software and program solution where artificial intelligence is used have mostly thinking abilities. However, there are many questions to answer in ongoing AI research, especially when we come to the point which is addressing humanlike behaviour and reasoning triggered by emotions. In this paper, we are presenting an interactive installation Botorikko: Machine Create State, which is part of the Syntropic Counterpoints art/research project. We are exposing AI cyber clones to some of the fundamental questions for humankind and challenge their creativity. The robots are trained by using the publications Machiavelli and Sun Tzu and confronted to the crucial questions related to moral, ethic, strategy, politics, diplomacy, war etc. We are using a recurrent neural network (RNN) and robot-robot interaction to trigger unsupervised robot creativity and humanlike behaviour on generated machine-made content. |
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Santos, H. |
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Santos, H. Predrag, K. Nikolic Md Tomari, Mohd Razali |
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Book Section |
author |
Predrag, K. Nikolic Md Tomari, Mohd Razali |
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Predrag, K. Nikolic |
title |
Robot creativity: humanlike behaviour in the robot-robot interaction |
title_short |
Robot creativity: humanlike behaviour in the robot-robot interaction |
title_full |
Robot creativity: humanlike behaviour in the robot-robot interaction |
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Robot creativity: humanlike behaviour in the robot-robot interaction |
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Robot creativity: humanlike behaviour in the robot-robot interaction |
title_sort |
robot creativity: humanlike behaviour in the robot-robot interaction |
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Springer Nature |
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2020 |
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http://eprints.uthm.edu.my/2842/1/Robot%20creativity%20humanlike.pdf http://eprints.uthm.edu.my/2842/ |
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