Translating Cultural Choreography from Humanoid Forms to Robotic Arm
Chen, Chelsea-Xi, Zhang, Zhe, Zhou, Aven-Le
–arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence
Robotic arm choreography often reproduces trajectories while missing cultural semantics. This study examines whether symbolic posture transfer with joint space compatible notation can preserve semantic fidelity on a six-degree-of-freedom arm and remain portable across morphologies. We implement ROPERA, a three-stage pipeline for encoding culturally codified postures, composing symbolic sequences, and decoding to servo commands. A scene from Kunqu opera, \textit{The Peony Pavilion}, serves as the material for evaluation. The procedure includes corpus-based posture selection, symbolic scoring, direct joint angle execution, and a visual layer with light painting and costume-informed colors. Results indicate reproducible execution with intended timing and cultural legibility reported by experts and audiences. The study points to non-anthropocentric cultural preservation and portable authoring workflows. Future work will design dance-informed transition profiles, extend the notation to locomotion with haptic, musical, and spatial cues, and test portability across platforms.
arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence
Nov-25-2025
- Country:
- Asia > China
- Europe > United Kingdom
- England
- Cambridgeshire > Cambridge (0.04)
- Oxfordshire > Oxford (0.04)
- England
- North America > Canada
- Nova Scotia > Halifax Regional Municipality > Halifax (0.04)
- Genre:
- Research Report > Experimental Study (0.34)
- Technology: