AI Robots Steal the Show at Geneva Summit: From Football to Flood Forecasting!

At the AI for Good Global Summit in Geneva, robots demonstrated their wide-ranging capabilities, from playing soccer to answering trivia questions. The event highlighted AI's potential to transform daily life, including applications in healthcare, disaster management, and agriculture. Students from ETH Zurich showcased football-playing robots equipped with sensors.


Reuters | Geneva | Updated: 30-05-2024 20:38 IST | Created: 30-05-2024 20:38 IST
AI Robots Steal the Show at Geneva Summit: From Football to Flood Forecasting!
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Teams of robots jostled on a miniature artificial soccer pitch as androids answered trivia questions and took jabs at human ignorance on Thursday at an artificial intelligence summit on the technology's wide-ranging uses. Organisers said the AI for Good Global Summit in Geneva showed the ways the technology could improve and even transform lives.

"Sometimes we think about AI as just something big," said Tomas Lamanauskas, Deputy Secretary-General of the U.N.'s International Telecommunication Union (ITU) which staged the event. "At the same time AI can be embedded in so many more things in everyday life... Whether it's for flood forecasting, disaster management and early-warning systems, in agriculture, in health. It's across the board."

Displays showed off prosthetic limbs that could learn from a user's behaviour and adapt to muscle activity, devices to help visually impaired people avoid obstacles in the street and bionic cats and dogs built to act as companions. The football-playing robots were the work of a group of students from the university of ETH Zurich.

The team kicked, passed and kept track of the ball based on input from sensors. "The project allows our undergraduate and graduate students to collect experience on a full robotic platform," Jan-Nico Zaech, the project's scientific supervisor, said.

"It's a platform to test algorithms that can run in the real world afterwards."

(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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