188
edits
No edit summary |
|||
Line 2: | Line 2: | ||
[[File:a-captcha-pk-2011.jpg|thumb|Type the two words]] | [[File:a-captcha-pk-2011.jpg|thumb|Type the two words]] | ||
In order to the robotic laws of [[wikipedia:Three Laws of Robotics|Isaac Asimov]] and the [[wikipedia:Turing test|Turing test]] I | In order to the robotic laws of [[wikipedia:Three Laws of Robotics|Isaac Asimov]] and the [[wikipedia:Turing test|Turing test]] I experiment with ways we could adopt the functions of online captchas into the material world in the near future. | ||
==Idea== | |||
How can humans express themselves unlike androids? To discover the reaction of humans on robotic existance I create a notional szenario: | |||
Scientists from the Universität der Bundeswehr München designed an android system that is able to distinguish between humans and robots through a simple conversation. They started a field test in public spaces to find bugs that have to be patched and to train social competences of the system. | |||
==Performance== | |||
Dressed like an android I face public spaces sitting with a sign on my lap to get in contact with passers-by. The sign does not tell them why I was invented and what's my main assignment in the future. They have to get this through the conversation to me. To alienate the audience about their imagination of robotic behaviour (slow motion, humdrum voice and so on) and convince them about the progress of cybernetic science I will rarely move my body - but being appealed by the audience I will awake from standby and act completely humanely in every verbal and facial expression. | |||
==Media== | |||
The sign: [[File:analogue_c_fv.pdf]] | |||
Images | |||
=== | <gallery caption="field test with android systems" widths="200px" perrow="3"> | ||
File:analogue_c_fv_1.jpg|androids need tickets, too | |||
File:analogue_c_fv_2.jpg|on the way | |||
File:analogue_c_fv_3.jpg|getting in position | |||
File:analogue_c_fv_4.jpg|getting into contact | |||
</gallery> | |||
Video coming soon |
edits