“Robots have long struggled with flexibility. Until now, even the most advanced robotic systems have required massive amounts of data and painstaking instruction to complete basic tasks.
If a robot dropped a tool or failed to follow a script precisely, it would typically shut down or fail completely. However, a new breakthrough from [Cornell University](https://www.cornell.edu/) might change that dynamic entirely.
The new technology allows robots to learn complex, multi-step tasks by watching just a single human demonstration, even if the way humans perform a task differs significantly from how robots do.
But this training has required extremely controlled demonstrations – human movements had to be smooth, precise, and consistent, or the robot wouldn’t be able to replicate the actions. Any deviation would result in failure.”
RandomGenerator_1 on
Joke’s on them. Palladyne AI already does this and already has their products ready to sell.
Storyteller-Hero on
One step closer to the dawn of a new era under our future machine overlords.
(Six feet under that is.)

PaperbackBuddha on
Next we’ll have robots making YouTube channels of how-to videos, taking up 40% of the time asking us to smash that subscribe button.
frickin_420 on
Humans are happy when Mr Beast makes huge explosions beep I will also make humans happy this way
RegisteredJustToSay on
Little do they know online tutorials are so bad because they’ve been low effort SEO bait for over a decade that this’ll actually add years to the AI-takeover clock.
Left_Nerve_5974 on
Can I watch these videos, or is it just for robots?
7 Comments
“Robots have long struggled with flexibility. Until now, even the most advanced robotic systems have required massive amounts of data and painstaking instruction to complete basic tasks.
If a robot dropped a tool or failed to follow a script precisely, it would typically shut down or fail completely. However, a new breakthrough from [Cornell University](https://www.cornell.edu/) might change that dynamic entirely.
The new technology allows robots to learn complex, multi-step tasks by watching just a single human demonstration, even if the way humans perform a task differs significantly from how robots do.
For decades, robotic learning has depended heavily on imitation. In a method known as “[imitation learning](https://www.earth.com/news/cultural-learning-begins-in-infancy-during-parent-child-imitation/),” robots watch human demonstrations to acquire new skills.
But this training has required extremely controlled demonstrations – human movements had to be smooth, precise, and consistent, or the robot wouldn’t be able to replicate the actions. Any deviation would result in failure.”
Joke’s on them. Palladyne AI already does this and already has their products ready to sell.
One step closer to the dawn of a new era under our future machine overlords.
(Six feet under that is.)

Next we’ll have robots making YouTube channels of how-to videos, taking up 40% of the time asking us to smash that subscribe button.
Humans are happy when Mr Beast makes huge explosions beep I will also make humans happy this way
Little do they know online tutorials are so bad because they’ve been low effort SEO bait for over a decade that this’ll actually add years to the AI-takeover clock.
Can I watch these videos, or is it just for robots?