Show pageOld revisionsBacklinksBack to top You've loaded an old revision of the document! If you save it, you will create a new version with this data. Media Files=====Tamagotchi Effect===== * The [[http://www.starchamber.com/2003/12/the-tamagotchi-effect.html|Tamagotchi effect]] * Even US Army colonels [[http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/05/05/AR2007050501009_pf.html|get it]]. * Can a [[http://lucacardelli.name/Papers/Can%20a%20Systems%20Biologist%20Fix%20a%20Tamagotchi.pdf|systems biologist fix a tamagotchi?]] =====Uncanny Valley===== A theory of Masahiro Mori from 1970: [[http://www.androidscience.com/theuncannyvalley/proceedings2005/uncannyvalley.html]] <blockquote>We hope to design robots or prosthetic hands that will not fall into the uncanny valley. So I recommend designers take the first peak as the goal in building robots rather than the second. Although the second peak is higher, there is a far greater risk of falling into the uncanny valley. We predict that it is possible to produce a safe familiarity by a nonhumanlike design. So designers please consider this point. A good example is glasses. Glasses do not resemble the real eyeball, but this design is adequate and can make the eyes more charming. So we should follow this principle when we design prosthetic eyes. We can create an elegant prosthetic hand ? one that must be fashionable. Artist who makes statues of Buddhas created a model of a human hand that is made from wood. The fingers bend at their joints. The hand has no finger print, and it assumes the natural color of wood. But we feel it is beautiful and there is no sense of the uncanny. Maybe wooden hand can serve as a reference for future design.</blockquote> Please fill all the letters into the box to prove you're human. Please keep this field empty: SavePreviewCancel Edit summary Note: By editing this page you agree to license your content under the following license: CC Attribution-Share Alike 4.0 International psychology_and_robots.1233136814.txt.gz Last modified: 2009-01-28 10:00by davegriffiths