Dancing Robots Help Preserve Japanese Culture 244
Neil Halelamien writes "As reported on robots.net and other sources, researchers at Tokyo have used the HRP-2 Promet humanoid robot to help preserve moves from ancient Japanese dance for future generations. The researchers used motion capture to record the movements of a dancing master, then encoded and replayed them on the robot. The HRP-2 Promet robots are themselves quite interesting, capable of standing up after lying down and non-autonomously operating a backhoe. The external appearance was created by a designer known for his work on several anime series."
I am sorry to say but... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:I am sorry to say but... (Score:4, Funny)
I am sorry to say this... (Score:2)
I am sorry to say, but you missed a cliche... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:I am sorry to say but... (Score:3, Funny)
Of course any bimbo could do that
Re:I am sorry to say but... (Score:3, Funny)
For instance, how else will break-dancing of the 80's and line-dancing of the 90's be preserved? Also the macarena.
Think of the children! you don't want them doing that stuff do you? Let the robots do that nasty stuff.
Re:I am sorry to say but... (Score:4, Funny)
A little unnecessary? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:A little unnecessary? (Score:2)
Re:A little unnecessary? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:A little unnecessary? (Score:2)
When a dance is a live part of a culture, people don't need to be coerced into learning it.
When a dance is cut off, and reserved for a separate class, that dance is dead. The dances that I learned as a teen seem to have been specifically in rebellion against the dances we were force-fed in school.
Re:A little unnecessary? (Score:3, Insightful)
I can't believe I got the chance to first post? (Score:3, Interesting)
GET HIM!!! (Score:5, Funny)
Living in Japan... out of sync...? Nice try, robot scum -- you'll never take us alive!
Just like a goddamn robot to go for first post...
These dancing robots that preserve the culture... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:These dancing robots that preserve the culture. (Score:2, Funny)
And if they were redone by these guys [wired.com], could it do Mosh Mosh Revolution [megatokyo.com] ?
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No sig for you!
Re:These dancing robots that preserve the culture. (Score:3, Funny)
Step... turn
Re:Well if those one's don't, these one's sure do! (Score:2)
I've seen Qrio demos before but that was probably the most impressive thing I've seen in years!
I think I'm going to have bad news for my firstborn when I get home...
GTRacer
- Used to think OmniBot 2000 was the shiz-nite
Sick... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Sick... (Score:2, Funny)
What if nobody is interested? (Score:2, Interesting)
This is no different from writing down the moves in a book or filming them, except in that dancing robots could eventually record the moves in a way superior to that of a book.
Also, and this isn't really on the topic of Japanese dance, a dancing robot would be really useful for geeks. Many geeks would like to learn but are too embarassed to try with a real partner. It may be stupid, crazy,
Re:Sick... (Score:2, Insightful)
Stop and think about what you're saying. Do you mean to say that you are offended by robots encroaching upon human culture? Why would that be?
Hundreds, if not thousands of visionaries, sci-fi authors, and movie producers have already speculated about what our future society might be like were it populated by numerous robots and other sophisticated devices possessed of AI. Many have theorized that the robots would rebel against us, while others have portrayed a future in which humans
Re:Sick... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Sick... (Score:2)
But that is not the point. In such a society humans and robots would create shared cultural forms. Iain Banks does this kind of thing best IMO.
Consider the difference between the evolution of the blues into a form where we are unsupprised by seeing white blues musicians vs. the tradition of blacked-up minstrel shows. Or imagine there was suddenly a fashon for white
Don't look! Dancing robots behind link (Score:3, Interesting)
In that case, I heartily suggest that you don't watch this video [smartmobs.com].
Re:Sick... (Score:5, Interesting)
I'm sure a lot of people said the same thing when television could bring theatre into the home. A play on TV isn't real theatre, it loses its meaning.
Furthermore, it seems to me that you seem to think that the Japanese are all going to teach their robots to dance and they won't have to bother. That seems pretty unlikely. This is obviously another step in getting functioning robots, not a government program to make dancing machines. In short, I call typical American xenophobia.
Re:Sick... (Score:4, Insightful)
I read and reread the parent post and could not find a xenophobic statement up there. Just an understandable feeling of uneasiness about a human artform being preserved by robots. Although I do agree with you that it's better than having that artform completely lost, I still fail to see where xenophobia enters the picture. I call typical American-bashing :-)
Re:Sick... (Score:3, Insightful)
I mean, to say "look, we've preserved this dance! w00t!" does what, exactly?
Cultural actions out of context are worth what, exactly? If nobody's learning the dance as part of their culture, and if the only preservation of it is some dusty electronic file stored on a dvd somewhere, it's lost its context. It's lost anything that gave it an inherent value. You've preserved the empty, now-meaningless gestures.
Take someone from an inuit culture, and have a human pe
Re:Sick... (Score:2)
Dork.
Re:Sick... (Score:2)
I'd reference my Okinawan friend as she's not into traditional dance, but she's busy today and I can never remember how to convert from Eastern time to Japanese time.
Re:Sick... (Score:2)
I'm Muslim and Bangladeshi you dumbass. I care far more about Iraq and Iran than you would.
Re:Sick... (Score:2)
Oh well, you don't have the balls to not post AC and I'm getting to bed. Ta, loser, you've got quite a chip on your shoulder.
Re:Exaggeration - plenty still going on (Score:2)
In "...plenty of Japanese girl still learning..." the word plenty needs some definition. Last spring in Oakland, CA I was present at a public rehersal of an Aztec dance group. There were many young girls present and performing (though young boys were more prominent). This doesn't to me count as preservation of the Aztec culture. (E.g., as it was sponsored by a church, I really doubt that there w
Re:Honored place in Japanese culture (Score:2)
Re:Sick... (Score:2)
Re:Sick... (Score:3, Insightful)
Anyway, what I saw was the traditional dance being performed in concert by both robots and traditionally-dressed Japanese women. Neither I, nor any of my American friends, nor any of my Japanese friends, found this at all "sick". Why do you?
Why should technology be devoid of culture? If we choose to reflect our culture in our technology, as is very much the norm in Japan in my experience, does this not simply add to the
Re:Sick... (Score:2)
Technology will be devoid of culture until computers become intelligent. Technology is currently an ARTIFACT of culture. And a dancing robot is clearly an artifact of a certain culture that has that dance in it's past. (Less clearly, the robot may come from a different culture thant the dance.)
Perhaps, to look the most optomistically, the dancing robots can be a prosthetic for the culture, enabling a weakened limb to
Re:Sick... (Score:2)
Re:Sick... (Score:3, Funny)
P.S. Not to mention that you have serious problems with logic, probably caused by your sub-par intelligence. Just a few months ago the work was finished on restoring documentary films about early 20th century Britain. Do you think that the British cultural heritage should not have been preserved by film cameras? Do you think i
Re:Sick... (Score:2)
Line dancing. Now that is sick.
Re:Sick... (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Sick... (Score:5, Insightful)
Do you think it's wrong that we record music? I mean we record the sounds and play them over and over, never changing. Saying "robots should never dance" is pretty short-sighted. It could be used for a number of historical purposes. Throw the 'bot in a box for 200 years, and compare his moves to what is being done at the time. Society collapses, and styles are lost, the robot could be an important point of study and revive a dead style.
From a tech standpoint the robots could also be used to improve AI, so that robots can mimic (or even develop depending on your philosophical view), minor variances based on "feelings" when performing something artistic.
Re:Sick... (Score:5, Insightful)
I don't think music is different from art or music. It is created from human expression just the same, only the medium is different. When you talk about emulation that is what your player does, it emulates the music the musician created. An MP3 not an exact replica (encoding loses data), and moreover, it's recorded in a special room and manipulated by all sorts of machines to sound good (see Ashlee Simpson).
The robot is a recording device, same as a camera, but it functions in 3-dimensions, you can walk around it, you can see things that may be hidden from a camera. Perhaps your objection is that the robot is limited such that it may not have the resolution to capture everything important. Maybe facial expressions are lost, or its incapable to capture an exact postion. I would agree with that. But, as a tool I think a robot is valuable and over time improvements could make it so that what it loses could be comparable to the differences between a live concert performance and a CD.
Re:Sick... (Score:2)
Meant to say music is not different from art or dance, think its time for another redbull.
Re:Sick... (Score:2)
Okay...I'll buy the first part, that music isn't different from art. But you lost me at the music/music comparison...
-Trillian
Re:Sick... (Score:2)
How do you define a story? If you confine it to exact names, exact locations, and specific events, then you are right, a specific story doesn't change. If you view them more broadly as ch
Re:Sick... (Score:2)
We record dance moves to play over and over all the time. It's called video--you should check it out. Also, a tip: cameras will not steal your soul.
By the way, I don't see how programming this robot to repeat the motion-capture of a dancer does any better a job at preserving the dance than filming him/her would; but it's not relevant to the strangely hyperbolic point you're making.
Re:Sick... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Sick... (Score:2)
Ideally of course you'd have an actual person teaching you, but that isn't always feasible.
Re:Sick... (Score:2)
It is probably easier for somoene to learn a complex movement by repeatedy watching it being done than from a video, which only allows one POV.
You could also simplify the motion for initial learning (eg start with hands not doing anything interesting) and then slowly add in more complexities as the learner gets up to speed.
Obviously you cou
Re:Sick... (Score:2)
the motion tracking acts as very good notes of how the dance goes.
besides.. why can't art be performed by non-sentient beings? it's just a matter of taste. i listen to music 'performed' by machines all the time..
Re:Sick... (Score:2)
Music is simply a lot of nice sounding variations in the pressure of air, whether performed by a musician or a MP3 player. My father, who plays the viola in the spanish orchestra, has a fairly large CD collection, and I've never heard him say that CD recordings lack "soul" or anything like that.
It's not like this is such a new idea either. Player pianos and musical boxes are quite old inventions, for instance. I've yet to hear anybody describe a musical bo
Turn, step, turn... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Turn, step, turn... (Score:2)
motion capture probably not enough (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:motion capture probably not enough (Score:2)
In theory it wouldn't, but in practice it's pretty darned difficult to accurately motion-capture things like facial expressions and eye movements.
As I've said in another thread, the two approaches complement each other.
Dancing? (Score:2, Funny)
Here's your bodyguard version (Score:2)
They're Taking over! (Score:2, Funny)
Dancing Robots... (they're taking over)
Dancing Robots... (they're taking over)
Foootbaaaallll!
(just ask Strong Bad [homestarrunner.com]
Re:They're Taking over! (Score:2)
Video (Score:3, Informative)
Video preservation not enough?
There are plenty of robots in music, like these [lemurbots.org], admittedly for a different purpose. This article in the New York Times [nytimes.com] talks robots in art, and about this [brendanadamson.com] all-robot concert at Juilliard.
What is the world coming to?
Re:Video (Score:2)
no gap there (Score:2, Insightful)
Great (Score:2)
Re:Great (Score:2)
Hmmm... (Score:2)
Has To Be Said, I'm Sorry! (Score:3, Funny)
If only... (Score:2, Funny)
Good heavens, there is money to be made.
Someone call Sony.
I mean seriously, these people build super robots, then teach them to dance? Couldn't we at least get them to do my laundry?
White boyz in the hiz-ouse! (Score:2)
As opposed to a dancing idiot?
The Japanese Duped (Score:3, Funny)
(warning: large flash site)
Motion capture for other types of dance? (Score:4, Interesting)
I'm an avid swing dancer. In order to effectively learn new moves, I either have to see a video or have somebody teach me. With the video, I can replay it as many times as I want, but I only get one 2D angle. With a teacher I can appreciate the full 3D movement, but if I try to get them to replay too many times they get annoyed and smack me.
There's things like the Jiveoholic Dance Step Database [jiveoholic.org.uk], which is useful by limited to 2D.
Perhaps motion capture could be the best of both worlds? I imagine it wouldn't be too hard to capture the moves of expert swing dancers, and then have a piece of software to replay their movements in 3D. A user of the software could replay moves to their heart's content, switching to arbitrary angles. If robots like the HRP-2 ever become cheap and flexible enough, such motion capture could even be used to replay moves on the bots.
Some folks at MIT made a very rudimentary "swing dancing" robot arm [mit.edu], which provides swing dance leads. I wonder how long it'll be until we see humanoid robots capable of leading, or maybe even interpreting hand signals from a human and being capable of following.
One step further... (Score:2, Interesting)
DVDs, Movies? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:DVDs, Movies? (Score:2)
But... (Score:2, Funny)
Re: But... (Score:2)
motor skills show-off (Score:4, Informative)
I wrote a short article [openasia.org] about this market, and how Linux is dealing with it.
Re:motor skills show-off (Score:2)
Talk? That must be one hell of a pet pooch.
Re:motor skills show-off (Score:2)
Using this as a demonstration of your robot's graceful motion is a reasonable goal. Using this to preserve culture is
Slightly funnier headline (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Slightly funnier headline (Score:2)
In Japan (Score:2)
Not that many people care... (Score:3, Informative)
Isaac Asimov inspired? (Score:3, Informative)
Wasn't it in one of the later Foundation novels that Isaac Asimov [asimovonline.com] had a troupe of robots performing folk dances in the interests of keeping the dances "alive"?
Just another nail in the coffin of good predictive SciFi, I guess.
Newsflash: Japanese Researchers... (Score:2)
_Strata_ by Terry Pratchett (Score:2)
Sometimes science fiction writers predictions turn out to be true (even if that is not the purpose of sf), but I'm sure *which* predictions hold water come as a surprise to the writers.
Dance of the Naked Master (Score:2)
robot infatuated culture (Score:2)
Hardly surprising (Score:2, Funny)
Dancing Robtic Gerbals...... (Score:2)
Re:Dancing robots (Score:3, Insightful)
And as an Asian who is somewhat involved in Japanese cultural presentations, I find it hilarious.
Re:Dancing robots (Score:2)
Re:Dancing robots (Score:2)
Geez, somebody responds to an insentive stereotype with their own.
Re:Help preserve? (Score:2)
Re:Pusher vs shover (Score:2)
Re:Panel Assembly??? (Score:3, Funny)
It's a union robot.
Re:robots (Score:4, Informative)
It's amazing how accurately the plyojump blog entry describes the posts in this discussion. I really should've linked to it in my original submission.
Re:robots (Score:4, Informative)
Re:robots (Score:2)
Since you're obviously new here, you may not have seen one of these rare events.
Weebles wobble but they don't fall down (Score:2)
I just can't think of much of a market for a robot that can get up off the ground and not much else..... "Want to watch my robot HeRPe get up off the ground again? Go ahead, knock him over..."
Here's your market [hasbro.com].