Professor of Cognitive Neuroscience and Director of the Sheffield Robotics Institute, University of Sheffield
I am a Professor of Cognitive Neuroscience at the University of Sheffield and Director of Sheffield Robotics a cross-disciplinary collaborative enterprise involving both Universities in Sheffield.
My primary research goal is to understand natural intelligence, in animals and humans, and to use this understanding to create life-like intelligent robots. With my collaborators, I have created a variety of biomimetic robotic systems, including the whiskered robots Scratchbot and Shrewbot, exploration strategies and autobiographical memory systems for the humanoid iCub robot, and wearable sensory substitution systems. I am involved in a number of commercial projects to develop novel assistive and companion robots. I believe that developers of disruptive technologies should think carefully about the potential societal impacts of their work. In 2012, I led a European working group on the societal impacts of robotics and since then have been actively investigating ethical and societal issues raised by robotics, artificial intelligence, virtual reality and telepresence.
Ghost in the Shell thrills but ducks the philosophical questions posed by a cyborg future
Apr 03, 2017 13:19 pm UTC| Insights & Views Entertainment
How closely will we live with the technology we use in the future? How will it change us? And how close is close? Ghost in the Shell imagines a futuristic, hi-tech but grimy and ghetto-ridden Japanese metropolis populated...