University's Morgui robot deemed too scary for kids
Terrifying robots most certainly aren't anything new, and be it frightening or downright creepy, there's probably a bot out there weird enough to freak just about anyone out. Enter Morgui, the University of Reading-based robot that has been around for some time, but is just now getting the credit a bizarre skull that follows humans around should. The creation, which consists of a disembodied head, oversized blue eyes, and a classically evil grin, has been officially banned from testing around anyone under the age of 18 (permission notwithstanding) by the school's ethics and research committee, leaving the "Magic Ghost" to spook only mature audiences from here on out. Mo, as it's so aptly nicknamed, sports a metal head, the ability to detect visual / auditory cues, and sensors for radar, infrared, and ultrasonic detection as well, but oddly enough, it cannot detect human emotion, so you better not count on this fellow to have sympathy on your soul when you're screeching. The purpose of the machine is to judge how "people react to robots," and when the bot just so happens to lack any form of facial covering beyond a skeletal structure, we're sure the reactions are quite noticeable.[Via CollisionDetection]






















Terminator FTW?
lol
Its the terminator!
It's always amazing to me how people are scared of something every human has. Society has become a bitchy, wimpy mess.
"It's always amazing to me how people are scared of something every human has. Society has become a bitchy, wimpy mess."
Agreed. Strangely, when "The Terminator" came out I was fairly young (11) and I thought it was just about the coolest thing ever. What has happened to us? Ugggh. Under *18*? WTF?
By the Way, Morgui - you're beautiful. Don't ever change.
When I first saw it I literally said to myself:
"WTF TERMINATOR!?"
Put some skin on it!
According to the link, wasn't the original article written in 2003?
Oh come on... this seems like an ideal way to teach children to respect technology. A little paralyzing terror never hurt anyone.
Seriously though, most kids I know would probably think this thing is cool.
"It doesn't know pity or remorse and it absolutely will not stop until you are dead."
Maybe I will pick up one of those new tasers...
If you want to research how people react to robots, maybe you should make a robot that doesn't skew the results in favor of total pants-wetting terror.
As long as none of the kids are named "John Connor" everyone should be fine...
I, for one, welcome our terrifying, white-skulled robotic overlords. No, really I do!
i swear that's a t-100, there's even a gap in the side for its neural net processor ...
It looks less scary than
http://www.engadget.com/2005/06/11/kicking-it-in-the-uncanny-valley/
or
http://www.engadget.com/2006/10/05/uncanny-valley-2-hello-kitty-edition/
I mean, at least you can see the plastic parts so you know right away that it's a just robot, unlike those other robots.
true metal head \m/
but why the teeth? wouldn't a couple minor tweaks to the look make it less ahhnold-ish?
I go to Reading Uni, but I do Electronic Engineering, not Cybernetics, so no robots for us.
The one who built this, Kevin Warwick, is one of my lecturers. He's the dude who put a chip in his arm, attached to his nervous system, and then controlled a robot arm remotely.
I'm also at Reading University, and Mo currently occupies the corner of the room I'm working on my third year robots (he doesn't look quite as cool when he's turned off, which is unfortunately most of the time). I thought this was really old news though! Also, Kevin Warwick is a legend.
I was at reading uni, and yes this is old old news. It's quite weird having it follow you around (well the head). If i remember right the guys who built it bought the skull off ebay and modded it to fit the electronic gizmos inside.
I too am at reading uni, though I don't usually use the lab Morgui is in. The warning notice on the door is good for a laugh though.
Oh for crying out loud! Johnny 5 didn't had any skin and people reacted (mostly) good towards it. Nobody seems to be scared when watching C3PO naked. This is one of those "Why, oh, why would they do that" studies, mostly because we all know how the Terminators are going to look like.
By the way, we react like that because of the primordial instincts, being that if you happen to encounter a decaying corpse it is most likely to have lots of diseases and bacteria and such that, albeit with time, could render you dead as well. So as a mechanism of protection, we tend to at least step back (unless you are desensibilitized, e.g. by watching such great movies as Cannibal Holocaust while eating breakfast).
:P