The Life Scientific: Helen Hastie
Professor Helen Hastie on the importance of building trust between humans and robots - and why the fictional Wall-E is such a great example of a robot we'd like to interact with.
What if robots of the future weren鈥檛 just clever machines, performing tasks in isolation, but trusted teammates you could have a chat with? That could respond naturally to conversational cues and even explain their work? Making this relationship a reality is a focus for Helen Hastie, Professor of Human-Robot Interaction and Head of the School of Informatics at the University of Edinburgh. Helen鈥檚 career has taken her from developing early dialogue systems - the ancestors of today鈥檚 generative AI - to working on sophisticated bots that can serve coffee with a side of small-talk, teach struggling kids with empathy, or provide calm and confident decisions as triage nurses. She鈥檚 also driven some of the UK鈥檚 flagship robotics initiatives, including as co-lead of the National Robotarium. Talking to Professor Jim Al-Khalili - who reveals he was once told off for rudeness by an early chatbot - Helen explains her hopes for useful, reliable and ultimately trustworthy robots; machines that aren鈥檛 just in our world but a welcome part of it.
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