China opened the three-day-long World Humanoid Robot Games yesterday, looking to showcase its advances in artificial intelligence and robotics with 280 teams from 16 countries.
Robots competed in sports such as track and field, and table tennis, as well as tackled robot-specific challenges from sorting medicines and handling materials to cleaning services.
Teams came from countries including the US, Germany and Brazil, with 192 representing universities and 88 from private enterprises such as China’s Unitree and Fourier Intelligence. Competing teams used robots from Chinese manufacturers such as Booster Robotics.
Photo: Reuters
“We come here to play and to win. But we are also interested in research,” said Max Polter, a member of HTWK Robots soccer team from Germany, affiliated with Leipzig University of Applied Sciences.
“You can test a lot of interesting new and exciting approaches in this contest. If we try something and it doesn’t work, we lose the game. That’s sad but it is better than investing a lot of money into a product which failed,” he said.
At the robot games in Beijing, which charged 128 to 580 yuan (US$17.82 to US$80.74) for tickets, humanoids crashed into each other and toppled over repeatedly during soccer matches, while others collapsed mid-sprint during running events.
Photographer: Qilai Shen/Bloomberg
During one soccer match, four robots crashed into each other and fell in a tangled heap. In the 1,500m running event, one robot suddenly collapsed while running at full speed, drawing gasps and cheers from spectators.
Despite frequent tumbles requiring human assistance to help robots stand, many managed to right themselves independently, earning applause from audiences.
Organizers said the games provide valuable data collection opportunities for developing robots for practical applications such as factory work.
Soccer matches help train the robots’ coordination abilities, which could prove useful for assembly line operations requiring collaboration between multiple units, commentators said.
China is investing billions of dollars in humanoids and robotics as the country grapples with an aging population and growing competition with the US over advanced technologies.
It has staged a series of high-profile robotics events in recent months, including what it called the world’s first humanoid robot marathon in Beijing, a robot conference and the opening of retail stores dedicated to humanoid robots.
Morgan Stanley analysts in a report last week noted a surge in attendance at a recent robot conference from the general public compared with previous years, saying this showed “how China, not just top government officials, has embraced the concept of embodied intelligence.”
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