Chinese scientists develop humanoid robots with realistic facial expression
Chinese scientists develop humanoid robots with realistic facial expression
/CFP Despite the summer vacation, Liu Xiaofeng, a professor at Hohai University
in east China's Jiangsu Province, and his research team have remained immersed
in the laboratory, focusing on developing humanoid robots with highly expressive
facial features. Eyeing on optimizing human-robot emotional interaction
technology, the research team has developed a new algorithm for generating
facial expressions on humanoid robots. At its 26th annual meeting on July 2, the
China Association of Science and Technology listed research on emotionally
intelligent digital humans and robots at the top of the 10 major cutting-edge
scientific issues of 2024. On the same day, Liu's team published their findings,
a new approach for action unit (AU)-driven facial expression disentangled
synthesis, in the international journal IEEE Transactions on Robotics. Humanoid
robots often struggle to convey the intricate and authentic facial expressions
characteristic of humans, potentially hampering user engagement, Liu said. "To
address this challenge, we introduced a comprehensive two-stage methodology to
empower our autonomous affective robot with the capacity to exhibit rich and
natural facial expressions," he added. Liu explained that in the first stage,
their method generates nuanced robot facial expression images guided by AUs. In
the subsequent phase, they actualize an affective robot with multifaceted
degrees of freedom for facial movements, enabling it to embody the synthesized
fine-grained facial expressions. Ni Rongrong, from Changzhou University who is a
co-author of the paper, said that people may be more familiar with various
"digital humans" and "virtual anchors," which can generate a variety of
real-time expressions. However, humanoid robots face specific constraints, such
as the size and number of motors, which make this more challenging, Ni added.
"For example, the humanoid robot we previously used had only nine micro motors
beneath its facial surface, far fewer than the number of muscles in a human
face." Therefore, according to Ni, the team divided the nine motors on the
humanoid robot's face into 17 AUs to enable richer expressions and smoother
transitions through coordinated movements. Liu said that the team of researchers
plans to expand the number of facial AUs and endow a robot with delicate
expressions autonomously. Liu believes that as the emotional interaction
capabilities of humanoid robots continue to advance, these robots, equipped with
both high emotional and intellectual quotients, will become widely used in
nursing homes, kindergartens, special education schools, and other settings.
"The humanoid robots will not only assist or replace humans in completing some
tasks but also bring more emotional value," he said. Source(s): Xinhua News
Agency
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