The Future Is Here Today...Robots, Genetics, AI, Longevity, Singularity

journalist robot from Tokyo University

This robot journalist can explore its surroundings, take pictures, interview people, perform internet searches, and publish online. Ok, I'm about to lose my job.

Robots are after my job. Researchers at the Intelligent Systems Informatics Lab (ISI) at Tokyo University have developed a journalist robot that can autonomously explore its environment and report what it finds. The robot detects changes in its surroundings, decides if they are relevant, and then takes pictures with its on board camera. It can query nearby people for information, and it uses internet searches to further round out its understanding. If something appears newsworthy, the robot will even write a short article and publish it to the web. Charlie Catlett, from Argonne National Labs, seemed impressed with the bot, and it made a splash at the most recent meeting of the Information Processing Society of Japan. By combining real world and internet research, the journalist robot is taking a step beyond other automated systems. Give it enough time, and robots like these could become a valued asset for news feeds everywhere.

We’ve seen a growing trend for automated journalism in the last year. There’s software that can write a decent sports story or even generate original news video by compiling images and opinions from the web. Journalist robots, however, are really taking the phenomenon to another level. This is the first robot I’ve seen that gathers primary source information from people in the field. That’s real journalism, even if it’s at a primitive level. What’s more, if our experiences with crowd-navigated robots have shown us anything it’s that people seem to like helping bots in need. Robot journalists can go to areas too dangerous for human reporters. Back in 2002, MIT created the Afghan eXplorer robot to cover the war there. Of course, that robot was a teleoperated shell while the ISI bot is autonomous. Which means that we can make a huge number of these bots, send them out into the field unsupervised, and have them generate a new era of robot written media. People may even want to read it. Of course, human journalists are likely to be preferred for years to come. After all, the robot can’t take pictures, do independent research, interview witnesses, work under extreme stress, pull an all-nighter make pithy pop culture references.

robot journalist

An older model of the journalist robot shows some of its components, including a base adapted from a Segway.

robot journalist flow chart

The robot journalist compiles information from both live and online sources to generate its article.

[image credits: Charlie Catlett via Twitter, ISI Lab]
[source: IEEE, ISI Lab (Google Translated), University of Tokyo Proposals (Google Translated), BBC News]

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32 Responses to “Robot Journalist Takes Pictures, Asks Questions, Publishes Online”

  1. [...] Robot Journalist Takes Pictures, Q&#965&#1077&#1109t&#1110&#959&#1495 Q&#965&#1077&#1109t&#1110&#959… [...]

  2. [...] up by his prize gator. Thanks to Tokyo University's Intelligent Systems Informatics Lab (ISI) and its new robotic reporter, we've stumbled upon yet another one of those advancements. According to Singularity Hub, the [...]

  3. [...] his prize gator. Thanks to Tokyo University’s Intelligent Systems Informatics Lab (ISI) and its new robotic reporter, we’ve stumbled upon yet another one of those [...]

  4. [...] Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments Subscribe to comments Both comments and pings are currently closed. | Post Tags: [...]

  5. [...] From Singularity Hub: “Researchers at the Intelligent Systems Informatics Lab (ISI) at Tokyo University have [...]

  6. [...] Check out the full article here. [...]

  7. [...] Robot Journalist Takes Pictures, Asks Questions, Publishes Online – “Robots are after my job. Researchers at the Intelligent Systems Informatics Lab (ISI) at Tokyo University have developed a journalist robot that can autonomously explore its environment and report what it finds. The robot detects changes in its surroundings, decides if they are relevant, and then takes pictures with its on board camera. It can query nearby people for information, and it uses internet searches to further round out its understanding…” [...]

  8. [...] ze web : Robot Journalist Takes Pictures, Asks Questions, Publishes Online Virtual News Cast – Are Any Journalists Safe From Automation? (videos) L’ère des [...]

  9. [...] Market Talk for the wire in the afternoon, so just can’t catch up. I’d like to see a robot do all that, but it hasn’t left me any time for [...]

  10. [...] we’ve been replaced by robots Journalism blog 10,000 words today linked to a piece on a robot journalist. Oh [...]

  11. [...] Explora su entorno y detecta qué anomalías pueden ser noticiables, hace fotos, recoge testimonios de los presentes y luego lo sintetiza en un historia que publica él mismo on line. Podría ser la descripción del trabajo de cualquier periodista en los tiempos que corren pero es la relación de cosas que es capaz de hacer… un robot. [...]

  12. [...] robot – sostiene  SingularityHub, un sito specializzato in genetica, robot e intelligenza artificiale  – sposta la materia su [...]

  13. [...] statistics website, is planning on developing it’s own writer this summer. There’s a robot in Japan that will investigate, interview, and photograph until it finds a story worth publish…. Now, with APIDIS, computers are taking over the roll of directors and editors, finding the best [...]

  14. [...] Northwestern University’s Stats Monkey program. Recently, we’ve also seen a Japanese robot that will perform basic photography and interviews and write a report on what it finds. Now with these announcements from Statsheets, it seems like artificial journalism is getting ready [...]

  15. [...] Christmastime), I found this little gem hiding between “jobs at college humor” and an article about robot journalists last [...]

  16. [...] burutik daude! Oraingoan ez dute, ba, errobot kazetaria [...]

  17. [...] StatSheet to Create Artificial Journalists SingularityHub: Automating Sports Coverage Robot Journalist 2010 Special Olympics Nebraska TED: Aimee Mullins on Running Grooveshark Stream Free Music $100 [...]

  18. Veta Spieler says:

    hey I like this post. I found it from doing a google search. Ive been looking for this sort of thing for a while. This info will come in handy to me. I will check back soon to search the rest of your blog. thanks

  19. [...] di prima mano dalle persone nella zona. Questo è vero giornalismo, anche se a livello primitivo», scrive Aaron Saenz. E poi aggiunge: «Il giornalista robot può andare nelle aree troppo pericolose per i [...]

  20. I should really go jogging, but this is amazing stuff.
    Can’t wait for your next post. Do you have a list to sign up to? Please let me know where to sign up.

  21. Daniel Walsh says:

    Wow, this is the coolest thing ever!! Great post :)

  22. An individual independent speech for NBC inside the Tv show. This individual has a seriously tough immigration policy. They graduated about the Harvard College. Right now he provides her 1 Broadcast Show. He could not like the actual American president.

  23. Andrea says:

    I see that it is your passion.

  24. I think soon journalists will be jobless :P

  25. [...] de 2010, el equipo del Laboratorio de Sistemas Inteligentes de la Universidad de Tokio creó un robot capaz, por sí solo, de detectar cambios en su entorno, decidir si son relevantes y tomar [...]

  26. The only thing computers cannot do as well as humans is be creative and yet as a society we have relegated creativity. In our schools we dump creativity at primary level. If we want to save all our jobs from the computers then we need to invest more time in developing our creativity cause we can’t beat computers at their own game.

  27. The layout of the weblog is totally messed up when I look at it in Opera. Plz fix it.

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