Robohub Podcast show

Robohub Podcast

Summary: Robots is the podcast for news, interviews and discussions on all aspects of robotics. In addition to insights from high-profile professionals, Robots will take you for a ride through the world's research labs, robotics companies and their latest innovations.

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Podcasts:

 ep.300: Past and Present Podcast Team Members, with Sabine Hauert, Peter Dürr and Andra Keay | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 0

Welcome to the 300th episode of the Robohub podcast! You might not know that the podcast has been going in one form or another for 14 years. Originally called “Talking Robots,” the podcast was started in 2006 by Dario Floreano and several of his PhD students at EPFL, in Switzerland, including Sabine Hauert, Peter Dürr, and Markus Waibel, who are all still involved in Robohub today.  Since then, the podcast team has become international, with most of its interviewers in the United States and Europe, and all of its members being volunteers. To celebrate 300 episodes of our podcast, we thought we would catch up with some of our former, as well as current, volunteers from around the world to find out why and how they got involved in the podcast, how their involvement impacted on their lives and careers, and what they’re doing in their day jobs now.

 ep.299: On the Novelty Effect in Human-Robot Interaction, with Catharina Vesterager Smedegaard | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 0

In this episode, we take a closer look at the effect of novelty in human-robot interaction. Novelty is the quality of being new or unusual. The typical view is that while something is new, or “a novelty”, it will initially make us behave differently than we would normally. But over time, as the novelty wears off, we will likely return to our regular behaviors. For example, a new robot may cause a person to behave differently initially, as its introduced into the person’s life, but after some time, the robot won't be as exciting, novel and motivating, and the person might return to their previous behavioral patterns, interacting less with the robot. To find out more about the concept of novelty in human-robot interactions, our interviewer Audrow caught up with Catharina Vesterager Smedegaard, a PhD-student at Aarhus University in Denmark, whose field of study is Philosophy. Catharina sees novelty differently to how we typically see it. She thinks of it as projecting what we don't know onto what we already know, which has implications for how human-robot interactions are designed and researched. She also speaks about her experience in philosophy more generally, and gives us advice on philosophical thinking.

 #299: On the Novelty Effect in Human-Robot Interaction, with Catharina Vesterager Smedegaard | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: Unknown

#299: On the Novelty Effect in Human-Robot Interaction, with Catharina Vesterager Smedegaard

 #298: Cognitive Robotics Under Uncertainty, with Marlyse Reeves | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: Unknown

#298: Cognitive Robotics Under Uncertainty, with Marlyse Reeves

 ep.298: Cognitive Robotics Under Uncertainty, with Marlyse Reeves | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 0

In this episode Lilly Clark interviews Marlyse Reeves, PhD student at MIT, about her work in cognitive robotics and hybrid activity-motion planning. Reeves discusses the role of robotics in space, the challenges of multi-vehicle missions, planning under uncertainty, and her work on an underwater exploration mission.

 ep.297: Using Natural Language in Human-Robot Collaboration, with Brad Hayes | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 0

In this episode, we hear from Brad Hayes, Assistant Professor of Computer Science at the University of Colorado Boulder, who directs the university's Collaborative AI and Robotics lab. The lab’s work focuses on developing systems that can learn from and work with humans—from physical robots or machines, to software systems or decision support tools—so that together, the human and system can achieve more than each could achieve on their own. Our interviewer Audrow caught up with Dr. Hayes to discuss why collaboration may at times be preferable to full autonomy and automation, how human naration can be used to help robots learn from demonstration, and the challenges of developing collaborative systems, including the importance of shared models and safety to allow adoption of such technologies in future.

 #297: Using Natural Language in Human-Robot Collaboration, with Brad Hayes | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: Unknown

#297: Using Natural Language in Human-Robot Collaboration, with Brad Hayes

 #296: Robust Robotics and the Quest for Intelligence, with Nicholas Roy | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: Unknown

#296: Robust Robotics and the Quest for Intelligence, with Nicholas Roy

 ep.296: Robust Robotics and the Quest for Intelligence, with Nicholas Roy | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 0

In this episode Lilly Clark interviews Nicholas Roy, Professor of Aeronautics and Astronautics at MIT, about the Quest for Intelligence initiative and his research in robust robotics. Roy discusses how cognitive science pushes artificial intelligence, further pushing the capabilities of engineering tools and services, and speaks about the importance of explainable and ethical AI. He explains the challenges of capturing context and semantics in useful models of a system, and designing unmanned aerial vehicles and robots which interact with humans.

 #295: inVia Robotics: Product-Picking Robots for the Warehouse, with Rand Voorhies | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: Unknown

#295: inVia Robotics: Product-Picking Robots for the Warehouse, with Rand Voorhies

 ep.295: inVia Robotics: Product-Picking Robots for the Warehouse, with Rand Voorhies | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 0

In this episode, Lauren Klein speaks with Dr. Rand Voorhies, co-founder and CTO of inVia Robotics. In a world where consumers expect fast home delivery of a variety of goods, inVia’s mission is to help warehouse workers package diverse sets of products quickly using a system of autonomous mobile robots. Voorhies describes how inVia’s robots operate to pick and deliver boxes or totes of products to and from people workers in a warehouse environment eliminating the need for people to walk throughout the warehouse, and how the actions of the robots are optimized.

 ep.294: Autonomous Bricklaying by FBR, with Mark Pivac | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 0

In this episode, Ron Vanderkley interviews Mark Pivac, Chief Technical Officer and co-founder of FBR (formerly Fastbrick Robotics) about the world’s first end-to-end autonomous bricklaying robot, ‘Hadrian X’. Three years after his first interview, we catch up with Pivac to see how FBR has expanded its operation and chat about their latest commercial prototype, ‘Hadrian X’, as well as the future of the robotic construction industry.

 #294: Autonomous Bricklaying by FBR, with Mark Pivac | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: Unknown

#294: Autonomous Bricklaying by FBR, with Mark Pivac

 ep.293: A Robot to Help with Artificial Insemination, with Zhuoran Zhang | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 0

In this episode, Audrow Nash interviews Zhuoran Zhang, PhD student at the University of Toronto, about how robots can be used to assist in artificial insemination. Zhang discusses how precise robotic manipulators can be used to extract a single sperm and how sperm can be evaluated for fitness using computer vision. Zhang also discusses his future plans.

 #293: A Robot to Help with Artificial Insemination, with Zhuoran Zhang | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: Unknown

#293: A Robot to Help with Artificial Insemination, with Zhuoran Zhang

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