When Will We See the First Robot That Is Indistinguishable From a Human?

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Robotic Replicas​

The classic Sci-Fi show, Star Trek: The Next Generation, chronicled the efforts of the humanoid robot Data to become more human. While Data was an advanced and one-of-a-kind android, he was obviously not biological. He did not experience human emotion (for the most part), and his designer was not able to correctly emulate a natural color for his skin and eyes.

The challenges of simulating human appearance and personality are real, and today’s engineers are struggling to overcome them. While many strides are being made in human-like robots, we haven’t quite achieved a model that is indistinguishable from humans. So we asked Futurism readers when we should expect to mistake a machine for a man.

The decade that received the most votes — about 27 percent of respondents — was the 2030s, and more than 60 percent of voters believed that robots will be identical to humans before 2050. Respondent Janet Rae-Dupree was skeptical of these predictions, giving her vote 2080s because of the many features that must be perfected in order for a robot to pass as human.

“Among the many hurdles, we must develop: A universal, general-purpose, free-standing artificial intelligence; actuators and servos capable of fluid motion within human ranges; artificial ‘skin,’ ‘eyes,’ ‘hair,’ ‘tongue,’ voice, lips — so many things that must pass as human,” Rae-Dupree wrote in her response. “That’s just to start. The 2030s? Puh-leez. That’s just wishful thinking.”

Human appearance, physicality, and personality are certainly difficult to emulate, but many researchers are working on various aspects of these problems. Microsoft has begun working towards creating an artificial intelligence that is more human, and scientists are exploring ways to grow human skin on robots.

What The Experts Have to Say​

These kinds of technologies and some particularly advanced prototypes have convinced Max Aguilera-Hellweg, who has published his photos and stories of 21st-century robotics in Humanoid, that robots that can pass as humans are already being made. “The world of science fiction in books and film, it’s not too far off from what’s going on today in research labs,” Aguilera-Hellweg said in an interview with Popular Mechanics. “These [humanoids] are changing and developing so fast, and they’re already in our midst. We’re living in the future now, and the future is happening at a rapid pace.”

This is high praise of our current technological capacity. Still, some engineers are struggling to get past an issue called the “uncanny valley.” This term describes the realm of human-likeness where objects transition from being cute and human like to being zombie-like and creepy.

One company that is trying to steer clear of the creepiness factor with its humanoid robots is Hong Kong-based Hanson Robotics. Chief Marketing Officer, Jeanne Lim, said the company’s engineers were working on ways to get their robots, which include the Albert Einstein HUBO, to interact with humans using the correct facial expressions.

“Once we overcome this with design and animation that is attuned to human perception and psychology, then we can create an uncannily human-like faces with no ‘valley,'” Lim said in an interview with Forbes. And Lim believes they are close to attaining this. “We expect to see an explosion of service robots in the next five years.”

See all of the Futurism predictions and make your own predictions here.
 
I read something once that people in the 1930's believed we would have human like robots/androids/cyborgs by now, and how the idea of a human-like robot is and always will be complete fantasy. Even if we had the technology to make a robot, we wouldn't, as it would be far more effecient/useful to create a central Intelligent AI, that controls our gadgets.

Basically the idea of robots is centuries old, and is a centuries old idea that will never come to fruition, outside of novelty shows, as it will be equivelent of making a self-loading, self-repeating catapult, when cannons exist.
 
Never, it's technologically and mathematically impossible to code a robot or an AI to think freely and achieve sentience. There's the possibility of making artificial brains that can have brain waves coded and copied from a live human and stored into an artificial one, but that's like a copy paste rather than a sentient AI made from scratch. I don't transfers of the consciousness is possible.
 
What would happen if we did though? particularly with human women?
 
the idea of a human-like robot is and always will be complete fantasy. Even if we had the technology to make a robot, we wouldn't, as it would be far more effecient/useful to create a central Intelligent AI, that controls our gadgets.
Never, it's technologically and mathematically impossible to code a robot or an AI to think freely and achieve sentience. There's the possibility of making artificial brains that can have brain waves coded and copied from a live human and stored into an artificial one, but that's like a copy paste rather than a sentient AI made from scratch. I don't transfers of the consciousness is possible.
While we push technology to the cutting edge, we also meet the robots in the middle with more and more autism babies. When you have enough tards doing repetitive and illogical things, you really won't be able to tell the difference between man and machine.
 
If we are talking complete in intelligence, emotion, and anatomical appearance. it is beyond when any of us currently living will still be around. It will be at least 100+ years. As far as intelligence only, maybe 50-70 years. As far as appearance only, again, maybe 70-100 years.

At the moment we only have robots, and shitty robots at that. We don't have anything even approaching an actual android (except for horrible abominations that are just a bad joke) and nothing like it on the horizon.

Now, if we are talking biodroid, artificial and biological, I think that will happen way before pure androids. The question just becomes which direction does it happen from? Does it happen from the bottom up? Meaning we fill in the gaps in our ability to make purely artificial systems using biology. Or does it happen from the top down? Meaning we augment biological deficiencies with artificial constructs. Or does it come from both sides and it just eventually meets in the middle?

Ultimately I believe we will find out biodroids are the best of both worlds. The biology part of it doesn't even necessarily mean the current or known biology. It wouldn't be difficult to implement systems and synthetic biology and apply it to the problem, such as an artificial genetic code that can be expanded as necessary, etc... Eventually both synthetic and biological system would reach peak hybridization and optimization. At that point, humans would be irrelevant, since such a biosynthetic system could evolve and optimize itself far better and faster than pure biological organisms.

This is always exactly where such progress was going to lead, to man becoming or creating an organism that is superior to its biological origins or itself completely. It was essentially mankind's fate once electronics were created.

This, of course, is assuming that the cats and robots don't team up and end mankind first.
 
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There's literally no use case for this. Why would one even want such a thing? Even a sex bot could be better than a human - more holes, etc. Robots are great BEACAUSE the are purpose-built to excel at particular things. This is the dumbest fucking robot idea out there.

Edited to fix spelling.
 
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