4.4 • 1.6K Ratings
🗓️ 8 October 2024
⏱️ 10 minutes
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Scientists at Waseda University in Japan built the world's first humanoid robot in 1973. They called it the 'WABOT', the Waseda robot. It could see, walk and even talk. It was a huge leap forward in the history of artificial intelligence and robotics. Dr Hiromichi Fujisawa tells Ben Henderson how he was tasked with making the robot speak.
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(Photo: Leader of the project, Professor Ichiro Kato, with WABOT-1. Credit: Future Robotics Organization/Waseda University)
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0:03.7 | podcasting I'm Natasha Aronson I'm an assistant commissioner for the BBC and I work on |
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0:39.5 | discover. Have a listen on BBC sounds. Hello and welcome to the Witness History Podcast from the BBC World Service with me, Ben Henderson. |
0:54.4 | With artificial intelligence a topic of much debate, today I'm taking you back to a huge moment in its |
1:01.0 | development. |
1:09.0 | We start at Waseda University in Tokyo, Japan in 1973. A research team is working on a groundbreaking project, |
1:12.0 | the world's first humanoid robots, when suddenly |
1:17.1 | they're afflicted by that most human of sensations, the burning desire for a late night takeaway. |
1:23.0 | We walked very late oftentimes, |
1:26.0 | and sometimes until the next morning, |
1:30.0 | and so we often order the lamin to be delivered to the laboratory. |
1:36.0 | This is Dr. Heromichi Fugisawa. |
1:39.0 | Back then, he was a student at Waseda University, |
1:42.4 | and it proved to be a Noodle's delivery he'd never forget. |
1:46.1 | The delivery boy come in and asked what we are doing and he wanted to speak to the robot and very happily the system responded |
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