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Robots: 500 years in the making

By Andrew Gregory. Posted

Westworld ’s theme-park androids. I Robot. The Terminator . Kryten (and the Skutters). Robots are a staple of all kinds of fiction. We play with toy robots when we’re children, we build robots as soon as we can stick LEGO bricks together, and we probably own objects that themselves were made by robots.

But why are robots such a big deal for us puny humans? Ben Russell of the Science Museum Group might know. He’s curated an exhibition of robot curiosities called Robots: 500 years in the making, which is currently on show at the Museum of Science and Industry in Castlefield, Manchester.

“We know our visitors are fascinated by their bodies,” Ben suggests when asked. “Visitors spend ages going around the medical science galleries, looking at all the things that can go wrong with themselves and how to fix them when they do. We also have a natural tendency to anthropomorphise… the more humanlooking robots make you think about yourself.”

This natural interest in ourselves means that the robots in the exhibition hold up a mirror to us. Two of the more modern robots are the Kodomoroid, a Japanese robot used for reading weather reports, and the Robothespian. Both of them are very modern creations, but the Komodroid is almost too lifelike. In contrast, the Robothespian has its insides on display. It’s not trying to suspend your disbelief that you’re looking at a real person, and that arguably makes it easier to relate to, despite the fact that it’s very obviously not a human.

The Kodomodroid gets its name from the Japanese word for child (komodo), and was developed to read news and weather reports

Ben thinks this indicates a bit of an identity crisis – if the things that make us uniquely human are being taken away from us, is it time for the robots to take a step back?

The word ‘robot’ didn’t exist until the 1920s, but the things themselves have been around a lot longer than that. The robots in the exhibition are all products of their time. The earliest are simple wooden figures that re-enact scenes from the Bible, to show an illiterate public the meaning of the crucifixion.

Cygan, a 1957 robot. © Plastiques Photography, courtesy of the Science Museum

These animated scenes eventually spread into the homes of the wealthy and to exhibitions of curiosity for the paying public.

Machines in this age could write, play music, and produce woodwork but, without Arduino and Raspberry Pis, they were still very much single-use creations, with no intelligence. We’re extremely fortunate that whatever we make today can be repurposed with a few lines of code.

Our only worry is that the robots will remember being kept in these glass cases, and in time, it’ll be us inside there

But it’s not until the age of Fritz Lang’s Metropolis that we start to see the mechanical humans that came to define the word ‘robot’ for most people. These are the classic science-fiction robots, which can mimic actions programmed into them by a human. Where it gets exciting is the point at which the robots go from mimicking the actions of the body to those of the mind. But how comfortable are we with having an intelligent mechanical servant? It’s odd enough to issue commands to an Alexa, or something similar, without saying please; it’s going to be weirder still when Alexa has a face.

Ben is optimistic about the rise of the robots. “Pepper, the robot created by SoftBank, is one of the first to cross the uncanny valley, the gap created when robots get a little too close to us for comfort,” he says. “It’s friendly. It can give you a fist bump and truly interact with you.

“99-point-something percent of all robots are not humanoid; they’re designed to do a specific job. But, when they do finally escape from the factory into the human world, will it be helpful for them to have a human form? Where we go next is the big question. Let’s see what happens.”

Robots: 500 years in the making is on at the Museum of Science and Industry until 15 April 2018. After that, it’s going to the National Museum of Scotland, the Life Science Centre in Newcastle, and will then go on a world tour until 2021, including Stockholm and Tokyo.

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