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BY Melissa Locker

Don’t tell Elon Musk, but robots are getting smarter and better at our jobs.

Researchers at UC Berkeley have developed a robot that can very quickly learn how to act like humans. An algorithm taught the robot to watch a single video of a human picking up a new object and then mimic the action, even if it had never seen the object before. In a paper published on arXiv, the researchers detail their robot’s so-called “one-shot” imitation learning capabilities, which built on prior work, to achieve impressive results by combining imitation learning with a meta-learning algorithm—a process called model-agnostic meta-learning (MAML).

The results reveal that their robot can learn to manipulate a brand-new object simply by watching a single video, which makes you wonder what would happen if it watched a few episodes of RuPaul’s Drag Race.

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While picking up an object doesn’t sound that challenging (after all robots have been working assembly lines for years now) as Technology Review notes, this isn’t a milestone in getting handsy (so to speak) but in teaching. One-shot learning could make it so humans would simply have to show robots what they want them to do and then copy it, dramatically streamlining the robot programming process.

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Melissa Locker is a writer and world renowned fish telepathist. More


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