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Osaka Expo androids to be moved to Kyoto

The Japan Times

Android robots shown at the Osaka Expo in a pavilion produced by University of Osaka professor Hiroshi Ishiguro will be relocated to Kyoto Prefecture. OSAKA - Seven android robots shown at the 2025 World Exposition in Osaka in a pavilion produced by University of Osaka professor Hiroshi Ishiguro will be relocated to Kyoto Prefecture after the end of the event on Monday. In addition, the Dutch pavilion will be moved to Awaji Island, Hyogo Prefecture. People involved in the use of expo assets after the event hope that they will be loved as tourist attractions in their new places. The prefectural government of Kyoto was chosen as the new owner of the androids in an open tender held by the expo organizer, the Japan Association for the 2025 World Exposition, in September. The robots will be shown to the public at a research facility in the Keihanna Science City research district straddling the Kyoto municipalities of Seika and Kizugawa.

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  Genre: Personal > Honors (0.30)
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Japanese bank seeks to help regional economy with bus business

The Japan Times

Japanese regional banking group Senshu Ikeda Holdings' entry into the reservation-based transit bus business is aimed at stimulating the regional economy, President and CEO Atsushi Ukawa said in a recent interview. "Even regional banks in urban areas must think about serving the local community," Ukawa said of the first reservation bus operations by a regional bank in Japan. He said that the Osaka-based company will work with local governments to expand the operation area to complement public transport. Senshu Ikeda operates an "on-demand bus," which uses artificial intelligence to run according to users' desired dates, times and locations. It partnered with companies, including auto parts maker Aisin, to launch the bus operations on a trial basis in four municipalities in Osaka Prefecture in January 2023.


With government push, data takes root in Japan's senior care industry

The Japan Times

The senior care industry is shifting toward the use of artificial intelligence and data analysis to help elderly people gain more independence. The trend reached a new level with last year's introduction of a nationwide data collection system, which aggregates information on physical abilities and reports on the status of patients' care -- a move pushed and financially supported by the government. With the implementation of the new system, concerns have been raised that nursing care providers may not keep up with the changes. To address this problem, consultancy groups have held a number of lectures and seminars for them. However, there are still concerns that the new data-based system may mean the diverse needs of individual patients end up being disregarded.


Evacuation Shelter Scheduling Problem

Shimizu, Hitoshi, Suwa, Hirohiko, Iwata, Tomoharu, Fujino, Akinori, Sawada, Hiroshi, Yasumoto, Keiichi

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Evacuation shelters, which are urgently required during natural disasters, are designed to minimize the burden of evacuation on human survivors. However, the larger the scale of the disaster, the more costly it becomes to operate shelters. When the number of evacuees decreases, the operation costs can be reduced by moving the remaining evacuees to other shelters and closing shelters as quickly as possible. On the other hand, relocation between shelters imposes a huge emotional burden on evacuees. In this study, we formulate the "Evacuation Shelter Scheduling Problem," which allocates evacuees to shelters in such a way to minimize the movement costs of the evacuees and the operation costs of the shelters. Since it is difficult to solve this quadratic programming problem directly, we show its transformation into a 0-1 integer programming problem. In addition, such a formulation struggles to calculate the burden of relocating them from historical data because no payments are actually made. To solve this issue, we propose a method that estimates movement costs based on the numbers of evacuees and shelters during an actual disaster. Simulation experiments with records from the Kobe earthquake (Great Hanshin-Awaji Earthquake) showed that our proposed method reduced operation costs by 33.7 million dollars: 32%.


Dragon Quest attraction to open at Japanese theme park

The Japan Times

Kobe – A theme park on an island in western Japan will open an attraction featuring popular role-playing video game series Dragon Quest next spring, its operator said Thursday. The attraction at the Nijigen no Mori theme park on Awaji Island in Hyogo Prefecture will let visitors enjoy going on an adventure in the reproduced world of Dragon Quest. Nijigen Nomori Co., the park's operator, said the attraction will be built in an area of some 8,000 square meters, using rich nature and digital imaging. Fees and other details will be announced later, according to Nijigen Nomori, a unit of staffing company Pasona Group Inc. The attraction was designed by Square Enix Co., which produces the Dragon Quest series.

  Country: Asia > Japan > Honshū > Kansai > Hyōgo Prefecture (0.30)
  Industry: Leisure & Entertainment (1.00)

Local gov'ts plan to use AI to rate seriousness of bullying cases

#artificialintelligence

Nearly 30 local governments across Japan are planning to or interested in introducing an artificial intelligence system designed to assess the seriousness of school bullying cases in hopes of better responding to them, a source close to the matter said Thursday. Otsu city government, which came under fire for the way it handled a high-profile bullying case in 2011, has teamed up with information technology services provider Hitachi Systems Ltd, to develop the AI system, which predicts how serious a case of bullying has the potential to become based on an analysis of past cases. School bullying has long been a concern in Japan, with the education ministry data showing that elementary, junior and senior high as well as special-needs schools nationwide reported 612,496 cases in the year through March, up 68,563 from a year earlier. When a new case of bullying is reported, information on the incident, such as time, place and perpetrator, is fed into the system, which then searches its database to come up with an estimate of how serious the case is, expressed as a percentage. In all, about 50 pieces of data are used for analysis.


Local governments consider using AI to rate seriousness of bullying cases

The Japan Times

Nearly 30 local governments are planning to or are interested in introducing an artificial intelligence system designed to assess the seriousness of school bullying cases in hopes of better responding to them, a source close to the matter said Thursday. Otsu Municipal Government, which came under fire for the way it handled a high-profile bullying case in 2011, has teamed up with information technology services provider Hitachi Systems Ltd., to develop the AI system, which predicts how a case of bullying has the potential to become serious based on an analysis of past cases. School bullying has long been a concern in Japan, with education ministry data showing that elementary, junior and high schools as well as special-needs schools nationwide reported 612,496 cases in the year through March, up 68,563 from a year earlier. When a new case of bullying is reported, information on the incident, such as time, place and perpetrator, is fed into the system, which then searches its database to come up with an estimate of how serious the case is, expressed as a percentage. In all, about 50 pieces of data are used for analysis.


Two men arrested over deepfake pornography videos

The Japan Times

Tokyo's Metropolitan Police Department has arrested two men on defamation and other charges over distributing on the internet pornography videos they doctored so that the faces of actresses in the original videos were swapped with those of female celebrities, it was learned Friday. Takumi Hayashida, a 21-year-old university student in Kumamoto, and Takanobu Otsuki, a 47-year-old system engineer in Sanda, Hyogo Prefecture, admitted to the charges, police sources said. The suspects used an artificial intelligence technology called deep learning to produce so-called deepfake pornography videos. The case is the first involving deepfake pornography videos handled by police in Japan. Otsuki told the police that he wanted to be praised by others, the sources said.


Japanese firms develop contactless technologies to tackle pandemic

The Japan Times

Contactless technologies have come into the spotlight amid the spread of the new coronavirus as people have become more conscious of the risks of infection from touching doorknobs and buttons. While wearing face masks has become commonplace, Glory Ltd., a money-changer manufacturer, has developed an advanced facial recognition technology that is capable of distinguishing a face even when covered by a mask. Glory, based in Hyogo Prefecture, said it envisions using the new technology for walk-through entry control at offices, for example. The technology detects the shape of each person's eyes, forehead and nose -- the area that is not usually covered by a mask -- with the support of artificial intelligence and then confirms their identity, it said. The company said it will put the new product on sale in June at a suggested retail price of ¥2.2 million ($20,600).


What the world can learn from Japan's robots

#artificialintelligence

But it's not only in the common room that robotics is being employed. Upstairs, staff have access to robotic exoskeletons that fit around the waist and lower back: these apparatuses ease the severe body strain as they help their elderly clients get in and out of bed. "Japan is facing major demographic challenges due to the elderly wave, low fertility rates and a shrinking population. This leads to a number of issues facing Japanese society which the West can learn from," says Roger A Søraa, robotics researcher at Centre for Technology and Society in Norway. "Elderly care facilities and hospitals see a severe lack of healthcare workers; there are not enough humans to do the tasks the way they used to be done."

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