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View Full Version : BabyX, virtual infant prototype, Laboratory for Animate Technologies, Auckland Bioengineering Institute, Auckland, New Zealand



Airicist
29th August 2014, 09:42
Laboratory for Animate Technologies (https://pr.ai/showthread.php?7955)

BabyX (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BabyX) on Wikipedia

Airicist
29th August 2014, 09:44
https://vimeo.com/97186687

BabyX v3.0 Interactive Simulation
June 2, 2014


BabyX is an experimental computer generated psychobiological simulation of an infant which learns and interacts in real time.

BabyX integrates realistic facial simulation with computational neuroscience models of neural systems involved in interactive behaviour and learning.

Airicist
29th August 2014, 09:45
https://vimeo.com/103501130

BabyX First Words
August 15, 2014

Airicist
29th August 2014, 10:04
https://youtu.be/eAwqB9W-HQ4

Baby X world showcase coming to TEDxAuckland 2013

Published on Jul 15, 2013


The future of Artificial Intelligence...The Baby X showcase at TEDxAuckland will be a unique opportunity for TEDx attendees to interact with the installation, and the first time Baby X has been seen anywhere in the world. The showcase installation is the result of a collaboration between Augusto and Mark Sagar's laboratory for Animate technologies with the support of NZTE.

Airicist
6th September 2015, 15:15
https://youtu.be/o-Ve5CcAg8c

Auckland Face Simulator

Published on May 28, 2015


The Auckland Face Simulator is being developed to cost effectively create extremely realistic and precisely controllable models of the human face and its expressive dynamics for Psychology research and advanced human computer interaction (HCI). The faces can also be precisely controlled by individual muscle movements. Speech can be driven by real or computer generated voices.

Like BabyX the faces are autonomously animated and can see and hear.

Airicist
14th April 2016, 14:07
https://youtu.be/yzFW4-dvFDA

This freaky baby could be the future of AI. Watch it in action

Published on Mar 23, 2016


Mar. 23 -- Mark Sagar started his career by building medical simulations of body parts. He took those skills and went into CGI, most famously for movies including Avatar, King Kong, and others. Now he's combining his skills and building an entire brain and responsive face on a computer in order to map human consciousness.