New Method Developed to Improve Robot Performance in Helping Patients

Robots are becoming an increasingly important part of human care. (AFP)
Robots are becoming an increasingly important part of human care. (AFP)
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New Method Developed to Improve Robot Performance in Helping Patients

Robots are becoming an increasingly important part of human care. (AFP)
Robots are becoming an increasingly important part of human care. (AFP)

Robots are becoming an increasingly important part of human care, according to researchers based in Japan. To help improve the safety and efficacy of robotic care, the scientists have developed a control method that could help them better replicate human movement when lifting and moving a patient.

“In recent years, shortage of caregivers has become a serious social problem as the result of a falling birth rate and an aging population,” said researcher Changan Jiang, assistant professor of mechanical engineering at Ritsumeikan University, according to the German news agency.

According to the Phys.org website, the researchers have developed a method to control the movement of a nursing care robot's arm that doesn't produce the harmful movements or frictions usually produced by traditional robots' arms.

"Instead of compensating the friction, the new arm utilizes static friction that could reduce the patients' suffering when moved on their beds", the website reported.

In a related context, a team of researchers at the University of South California has developed a new technique that teaches robots different skills by competing with humans.

"This is the first robot learning effort using adversarial human users," said Stefanos Nikolaidis, a computer science researcher.

"Picture it like playing a sport: if you're playing tennis with someone who always lets you win, you won't get better. Same with robots: If we want them to learn a manipulation task, such as grasping, so they can help people, we need to challenge them," he added.

In his experiment, Nikolaidis used reinforcement learning, a technique in which artificial intelligence programs "learn" from repeated experimentation.

During the study, the researchers found that involving a human factor in teaching the AI system could help the robot acquire further skills by watching a human being completing his task. The experiment went something like this: the robot attempts to grasp an object, while the human observes the simulated robot's grasp. If the grasp is successful, the human tries to snatch the object from the robot's grasp.



Syria Seeks EU Help to Battle Massive Wildfires

FILE : A fire burns at a forest in Latakia province, Syria in this handout released by SANA on October 9, 2020. SANA/Handout via REUTERS
FILE : A fire burns at a forest in Latakia province, Syria in this handout released by SANA on October 9, 2020. SANA/Handout via REUTERS
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Syria Seeks EU Help to Battle Massive Wildfires

FILE : A fire burns at a forest in Latakia province, Syria in this handout released by SANA on October 9, 2020. SANA/Handout via REUTERS
FILE : A fire burns at a forest in Latakia province, Syria in this handout released by SANA on October 9, 2020. SANA/Handout via REUTERS

Syria’s minister of emergencies and disaster management on Tuesday requested support from the European Union to battle wildfires that have swept through a vast stretch of forested land.

The fires have been burning for six days, with Syrian emergency crews struggling to bring them under control amid strong winds and severe drought.

Neighboring countries Jordan, Lebanon and Türkiye have already dispatched firefighting teams to assist in the response.

“We asked the European Union for help in extinguishing the fires,” minister Raed al-Saleh said on X, adding Cyprus was expected to send aid on Tuesday, AFP reported.

“Fear of the fires spreading due to strong winds last night prompted us to evacuate 25 families to ensure their safety without any human casualties,” he added.

According to the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) office in Syria, the fires impacted “some 5,000 persons, including displacements, across 60 communities.”

An estimated 100 square kilometers (40 square miles) of forest and farmland -- more than three percent of Syria’s forest cover -- have burned, OCHA told AFP.

At least seven towns in Latakia province have been evacuated as a precaution.

Efforts to extinguish the fires have been hindered by “rugged terrain, the absence of firebreaks, strong winds, and the presence of mines and unexploded ordnance”, Saleh said.

With man-made climate change increasing the likelihood and intensity of droughts and wildfires worldwide, Syria has also been battered by heatwaves and low rainfall.

In June, the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization said Syria had “not seen such bad climate conditions in 60 years.”