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The Edge: Robot nanny no substitute for parent Print E-mail
Tuesday, 06 October 2009
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by EDWARD SZTUKOWSKI
News Editor

University of Sheffield professor Noel Sharkey has warned humanity to step up its protection from robots.

Sharkey is calling for legislative bodies to begin looking into guidelines for service robots, and is urging his fellow scientists to think of ethical issues that could rise.

Sharkey is a professor of artificial intelligence and robots, and believes if humans do not start setting guidelines for machines, we will run into ethical problems in the future.

I know what you must be thinking. This guy is a nut job! There is no way man-made machines could destroy or alter humanity! They are programmed not to!

Wrap your mind around this fact, human. In 2008, sales of service and personal robots numbered $5.5 million. The IFR Statistical Department, which presents global statistics on robots, estimates in the next two years, that number will double.

Robots are everywhere, and Sheffield believes with the growing number of service robots, chances of utilizing robots in child and elderly care are becoming increasingly realistic.

“Research into service robots has demonstrated close bonding and attachment by children, who, in most cases, prefer a robot to a teddy bear,” he said in an article on sciencemag.org.

Does anybody remember Teddy Ruxpin? It was a robotic teddy bear popular in the ‘80s, which utilized a tape deck to read stories. His mouth moved and it was creepy.

The kind of world where robot nannies tuck Junior into bed frankly frightens me. What if Robo-Nanny 3000 has a glitch and tucks him in too tight?

“Because of the physical safety that robot minders provide, children could be left without human contact for many hours a day or perhaps for several days, and the possible psychological impact of the varying degrees of social isolation on development is unknown,” Sharkey said.

There are certain robots I would not mind be raised by. R2D2 would be pretty cool, but you could get stuck with C3PO and he sucks.

In all honesty though, measures need to be taken before robot child rearing becomes a reality. Parents sit their children in front of the TV and expect to escape for the length of a TV show.

If parents can buy high tech robots that guarantee their child’s safety, I think they would take full advantage of it and not be around for their children as much.

Sharkey said studies can’t be done to test how a child will develop if robots raise them, but results from maternal deprivation suggest a severe outcome.

What happens when a robot raises a child? How can the child learn to feel?

A child needs a parent, and no robot could replace that fully.

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