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Thread: Lingodroids, language learning robots, School of Information Technology & Electrical Engineering, University of Queensland

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    Lingodroids, language learning robots, School of Information Technology & Electrical Engineering, University of Queensland


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    Lingodroids playing a location language game

    Uploaded on May 18, 2011

    Video showing Lingodroids playing a location language game.

    Schulz, R., Glover, A., Milford, M., Wyeth, G., & Wiles, J. (2011) Lingodroids: Studies in Spatial Cognition and Language, ICRA 2011, The International Conference on Robotics and Automation, Shanghai, China, May 2011

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    Lingodroids playing various location language games

    Uploaded on May 19, 2011

    Video showing Lingodroids playing where-are-we, how-far, what-direction, where-is-there, and go-to language games.

    Schulz, R., Glover, A., Milford, M., Wyeth, G., & Wiles, J. (2011) Lingodroids: Studies in Spatial Cognition and Language, ICRA 2011, The International Conference on Robotics and Automation, Shanghai, China, May 2011

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    iRat Lingodroid visits Sherwood's Year 2s
    September 18, 2011

    UQ's iRats have brains that map their own world - they don't need GPS. They make dates with each other - well, they can agree to meet somewhere after they map their world. And they are able to interact with people via mobile phones.
    Curiosity is a good thing discovered a couple of Year 2 students from Sherwood State Primary School who heard UQ research fellow Dr Daniel
    Angus and speculative fiction author-scientist Charlotte Nash on the topic, Does Sci-Fi Inspire Science, at the National Science Week Ekka Pavilion.

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    Robots talking with Robots- How Lingodroids invent their own language: Janet Wiles at TEDxUQ

    Published on Jul 23, 2013

    Janet and her colleagues had developed a robot rat called iRat. iRat can navigate, interact with real rats and develop language with other robots. What's next? In this innovative TEDx talk, Janet explores the possibilities of making smarter and multilingual robots that can understand the world better.

    Janet is the Professor of Complex and Intelligent Systems in the School of Information Technology & Electrical Engineering at the University of Queensland. Janet is a complex systems scientist, interested in how organisms are put together from genes to societies, and how this knowledge can be used in building robots. She recently completed a five-year project leading the Thinking Systems Project, supervising a cross-disciplinary team studying fundamental issues in how information is transmitted, received, processed and understood in biological and artificial systems.

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