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For Japan, industrial robots have brought them huge economic benefits, and pedestrian robots have met the needs of the general public.

With the arrival of the Tokyo Olympics in 2020, Japan will showcase more of the latest technologies in robotics.

The world ’s focus on robots will once again focus on Japan.

Toyota Robot Mascot for the Tokyo 2020 Summer Olympics. Picture from: Getty Images

Tenderly embrace the future of robots

The robot revolution is indeed getting closer.

But it’s not as fierce as we think.

Picture from: Toyohashi University of Technology / Vice

In the face of the global aging crisis and the continuous upgrading of automation technology,Japan’s friendly relations with robots may be the future of more countries.

In addition, in fact, Japanese companies still have certain shortcomings in AI applications, which also gives other countries the opportunity to catch up .

Rian Whitton, senior robotics analyst at global technology market consulting firm ABI Research, notes that China and the United States are rapidly catching up with Japan in areas such as home care robotics.

Fanuc Corp’s Industrial Weightlifting Robot

In a report released by the International Federation of Robotics last year, the world has the most industrial robots in the world. The country is South Korea, not Japan. Germany is close behind.

In the end, Japan will evolve from the world ’s top global robotics supplier to a relatively strong player that runs alongside Germany, South Korea, Singapore and Taiwan.

Like Japan, Korean society is ageing rapidly, which means the same situation is happening in more and more countries.

Robots are becoming an indispensable product for coping with population changes.

Picture from: Robot Tombot

The younger generations in Japan and other countries will grow more easily in a robotic environment.

Ishiguro believes that They will be integrated into our lives like smartphones a decade ago.

Takahashi Takahashi, one of the new generation of Japanese robot scientists, made the world’s first robot Kirobo that was sent to space to accompany astronauts. He I hope to make a humanoid mobile phone in the future

Whether or not the robot is “human”, we need to take this matter more seriously.

Kate Darling, a researcher at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s Media Lab, states in a paper on giving robots legal rights:

A lot of evidence shows that humans have sympathetic and emotional reactions to social robots, even unconscious robots. We should think about the impact of abusive robots on abusive humans.

Researchers found that when people look at these two pictures, they will also show a sympathetic neural response to the hands of the knife-cutting robot

They should be viewed as an integrated “extended intelligence” rather than an artificial intelligence that threatens humanity.

With the development and evolution of machine intelligence, robots will be better programmed and managed.

“Humanity” is a bit overrated. We must not only be people-oriented, but also cultivate respect for everything and the ability to communicate emotionally and spiritually with everything.

Geminoid F, a beautiful robot made by Japanese robot expert Ishiguro Hako, is the heroine of “Goodbye”

Sony’s robot Aibo has always been popular.

This robot doesn’t have many powerful functions and intelligent things. It simply interacts with the human “master” and responds like a puppy.

A dentist owner who bought Aibo named the robot Cinq. The name originally belonged to a dog who had lived with her for twelve years but died of cancer.

Now, every day after going home at 8pm, the 56-year-old dentist owner and husband can see the robotic dog Cinq