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Masahiro Mori (森 政弘; b. 1927) is a Japanese roboticist noted for his pioneering experiments on the emotional response of humans to non-human entities, as well as for his views on religion and robots. 1927 was a common year starting on Saturday (link will take you to calendar). ...
In 1970, Mori published "Bukimi No Tani" (English title: The Uncanny Valley) in Energy. The article forwarded the hypothesis that as robots become more humanlike, they appear more familiar until a point is reached at which subtle inperfections of appearance make them look eerie. 1970 was a common year starting on Thursday. ...
The Uncanny Valley is a principle of robotics concerning the emotional response of humans to robots and other non-human entities. ...
In 1974, Mori published The Buddha in the Robot: a Robot Engineer's Thoughts on Science and Religion in which he discussed the metaphysical implications of robotics. In the book, he wrote "I believe robots have the buddha-nature within them--that is, the potential for attaining buddhahood,"[1] 1974 is a common year starting on Tuesday (click on link for calendar). ...
Buddha-nature (originally in Sanskrit, Buddha-dhatu - Buddha Element, Buddha-Principle) is a doctrine important for many schools of Mahayana Buddhism. ...
In 1978, while on the faculty of the Tokyo Institute of Technology, Mori discovered through experiments that whereas humans may develop a fondness for robots with a mechanical appearance, the fondness turns to repulsion in the case of replicants that look "almost human". Mori called this phenomenon the Uncanny Valley. The discovery lead Mori to the belief that robot builders should not attempt to make their creations overly lifelike in appearance and motion. 1978 was a common year starting on Sunday (the link is to a full 1978 calendar). ...
Tokyo Institute of Technology (東京工業大学), often called Tokyo Tech for short, is the largest institution of higher learning in Japan dedicated to science and technology. ...
The Uncanny Valley is a principle of robotics concerning the emotional response of humans to robots and other non-human entities. ...
In 1988, Mori founded the first nation-wide robot-building competition in Japan and has widely promoted robot competitions in the years since then. [2] 1988 is a leap year starting on a Friday of the Gregorian calendar. ...
Mori is currently president of the Mukta Research Institute, which he founded in Tokyo in order to promote his views on religion and robots. The institute also provides consultation on the use of automation and robotics in industry. [3] The modern skyline of Tokyo is highly decentralized. ...
External links
- Mori, Masahiro (1970). Bukimi no tani [the uncanny valley]. Energy, 7, 33–35. (In Japanese)
- MacDorman, Karl F. (2005). Androids as an experimental apparatus: Why is there an uncanny valley and can we exploit it? CogSci-2005 Workshop: Toward Social Mechanisms of Android Science, 106-118. (An English translation of Mori's "The Uncanny Valley" made by Karl MacDorman and Takashi Minato appears in Appendix B of the paper.)
- IEEE-RAS Humanoids-2005 Workshop: Views on the Uncanny Valley. To be held in Tsukuba, Japan, near Tokyo on December 5, 2005.
- Robot Perspectives
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