Jamie Paik: Origami robots that reshape and transform themselves
Soft robotics expert Jamie Paik designs "robogamis" -- folding robots inspired by origami that are more adaptable than classical robots. Full bio
Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.
I get asked a lot of questions.
serving me breakfast?"
would be looking more like us.
that would simulate my eyes.
enough to serve me ...
of joints and actuators.
and shape are already fixed
has a really nice throw --
breakfast per se.
by a new vision of future robotics:
new environment and task at hand.
how robots are designed.
in a polygon shape
for different tasks.
it's not any news --
most of the movies are made.
that's physically moving,
paper boat, paper crane?
platform for designers.
you can make multiple shapes,
you unfold and fold back again.
from 2D surfaces by folding,
an intelligent sheet
and back into a flat sheet
of ninja origami robotic researchers --
and they do more than that.
actually serve a purpose.
through different terrains autonomously.
and flat land, it crawls.
of actuators that's on board.
it jumps over it.
in each of its legs
like a slingshot.
what a single robogami can do.
more complex tasks.
to create different shapes.
the folding joints,
different tasks.
important is the assembly.
find each other in a different space,
the environment and task.
of what you can achieve
to have a four-legged crawler
and make small gaits.
make it do something else:
classical robotic task.
it can pick up an object.
to make the manipulator legs longer
that are bigger or smaller,
one fixed shape nor task.
anywhere, anytime.
of robogami is keeping them super thin,
of circuits, motors,
individual folding joints,
soft motions like that
specifically made for a single task,
environments on the Earth
environment for robogamis.
one robot for one task.
you will encounter in space?
that can transform to do multi-tasks.
of thin robogami modules
of performing tasks.
and Swiss Space Center
of reconfiguration of robogamis,
aboveground, on the surface,
to bring interns up there, either.
to facilitate their experiments,
their third arm holding different tools.
to control robogamis, for example,
that is holding space debris.
so that you can control them,
is having the sensation of touch
the hands of the astronauts.
the sensation of touch.
smallest haptic interface
just underneath your fingertip.
movements at the stage.
will you be able to feel
just underneath his thumb,
with VR goggles and hand controllers,
is no longer virtual.
and black ball that he's looking at
sponge red ball and billiard black ball.
this is shown live
is an atlas of anatomy
reconfigurable robots,
where there is no object.
very flexible interface.
to approach skin,
how much stiffer it becomes.
on top of the ribcage
of the stiffness.
in terms of the force
that aren't moving.
something that moves,
of the sweater that you're buying,
to be more personalized and adaptive,
of reconfigurable robotics
this invisible, intuitive interface
the characters from the movies.
you want them to be.
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Jamie Paik - RoboticianSoft robotics expert Jamie Paik designs "robogamis" -- folding robots inspired by origami that are more adaptable than classical robots.
Why you should listen
As director and founder of Reconfigurable Robotics Lab (RRL), Jamie Paik taps a deep knowledge of fabrication and unique actuation solutions to create astonishing folding robots -- or, as she describes them: "robogamis. These self-morphing robotic origami transform their planar shapes to 2D or 3D by folding in predefined patterns and sequences, just like the paper art, origami.
Paik is an active promoter of soft robotics that combines multi-discipline engineering expertise. Her soft robots have commercial applications, including a robotic surgical tool and a haptic joystick that can render realistic force feedback beneath a user's fingertip.
Jamie Paik | Speaker | TED.com