Will robot pets replace the real thing?

Sony’s Aibo pet robot dogs. — credit | Sony

University of Melbourne animal welfare researcher Jean-Loup Rault, PhD says pets will soon become a luxury in an overpopulated, high-density world and the future may lie in robot pets that mimic the real thing.

“It might sound surreal for us to have robotic or virtual pets, but it could be totally normal for the next generation,” Rault said. “If 10 billion human beings live on the planet in 2050 as predicted, it’s likely to occur sooner than we think. We are already seeing people form strong emotional bonds with robot dogs in Japan.

“Pet robotics has come a long way from the Tamagotchi craze of the mid-1990s. In Japan, people are becoming so attached to their robot dogs that they hold funerals for them when the circuits die.

“You won’t find a lot of research on pet robotics out there, but if you Google robot dogs, there are countless patents. Everyone wants to get ahead of this thing because there is a market and it will take off in the next 10 to 15 years.”

“Robots can, without a doubt, trigger human emotions,” Rault added. “If artificial pets can produce the same benefits we get from live pets, does that mean that our emotional bond with animals is really just an image that we project on to our pets?

Sony’s Aibo pet robot dogs. — credit | Sony

“Of course we care about live animals, but if we become used to a robotic companion that doesn’t need food, water or exercise, perhaps it will change how humans care about other living beings.”

Rault says robot pets of the future could learn to think and respond on their own.

“When engineers work on robotic dogs, they work on social intelligence, they address what people need from their dogs: companionship, love, obedience, dependence,” he said.

“They want to know everything about animal behavior so they can replicate it as close as possible to a real pet.”

And what about robotic cats? “Well, that’s a little harder because you have to make them unpredictable,” he concluded. His open access paper is in the latest edition of Frontiers in Veterinary Science


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The Japan Times | Takara Tomy previewed toy robots Hello MiP and Hello Zoomer in Tokyo, from its Omnibots series.


Sony | An Aibo demonstration.


Dig Info | The Paro theraputic cute baby seal robot, designed to have a positive emotional effect on people who interact with it.


Family Gamer TV | Tamagotchi Friends toy line by Bandai, virtual pets.
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Limitless, Minority Report sequels coming to TV

Limitless, a TV series sequel to the movie, picks up after the events of the film. Edward Mora (Bradley Cooper), now a powerful senator and presidential hopeful, reveals the power of the mysterious drug NZT to Brian Finch (Jake McDorman) — who is then coerced by the FBI into using his newfound cognitive abilities to solve complex cases. Cooper is also executive producer.

Fall 2015. More at CBS.com

Minority Report (Fox) will be based on the film by Steven Spielberg (and the first of his films to be adapted for television). The show follows the unlikely partnership between a man haunted by the future and a cop haunted by her past, as they race to stop the worst crimes of the year 2065 before they happen.

Set in Washington, D.C., it is 10 years after the demise of Precrime, a law enforcement agency tasked with identifying and eliminating criminals — before their crimes were committed. The agency used three child precogs who were able to see the future. Now, in 2065, crime-solving is different, and justice leans more on sophisticated and trusted technology than on the instincts of the precogs.

Dash (Stark Sands) —  one of the three precogs freed at the end of the film and now driven by his terrifying but fragmented visions — has returned in secret to help police detective Lara Vega (Meagan Good) attempt to stop the murders that he predicts.

Fall 2015. More at Fox.