Berkeley startup to train robots like puppets

@machinelearnbot 

Robots today must be programmed by writing computer code, but imagine donning a VR headset and virtually guiding a robot through a task, like you would move the arms of a puppet, and then letting the robot take it from there. That's the vision of Pieter Abbeel, a professor of electrical engineering and computer science at the University of California, Berkeley, and his students, Peter Chen, Rocky Duan and Tianhao Zhang, who have launched a startup, Embodied Intelligence Inc., to use the latest techniques of deep reinforcement learning and artificial intelligence to make industrial robots easily teachable. "Right now, if you want to set up a robot, you program that robot to do what you want it to do, which takes a lot of time and a lot of expertise," said Abbeel, who is currently on leave to turn his vision into reality. "With our advances in machine learning, we can write a piece of software once -- machine learning code that enables the robot to learn -- and then when the robot needs to be equipped with a new skill, we simply provide new data." The "data" is training, much like you'd train a human worker, though with the added dimension of virtual reality.

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