One area of technology which has been in the news a lot recently is robotics -- the design and building of robots. |
Humanoid robots, meaning robots which appear and behave like humans, are being built to help us do everything from washing the dishes to babysitting the kids. |
But not everyone feels comfortable with the idea of inviting a human-like robot into their home. |
Neil, how would you feel about living with a robot? |
I really don’t want to live with a robot. |
I have enough people in my house. |
With advances in AI, robots are becoming smart enough to develop meaningful relationships with humans. |
There are reports of people telling their secrets to robot therapists and even falling in love with their robot friend! |
In this episode, we’ll meet a home companion robot called Abi, who’s making friends with the elderly residents of Melbourne in Australia. |
And as usual, we’ll learn some useful new vocabulary. |
First, I have a question for you, Beth. |
Because it’s important people feel safe around robots, |
engineers design them to look like the friendly characters seen in animated movies by studios like Pixar and DreamWorks. |
So, what is the name of Pixar’s friendly robot who picks up garbage on an uninhabited planet Earth in the year 2805? |
Is it: a) Roz, b) Wall-E, or c) R2D2? |
I am pretty certain that the answer is b) Wall-E. |
Well, we’ll find out the answer later in the programme. |
For five months during the Covid pandemic, Australian engineer Grace Brown had no human contact. |
She used this time to build a home companion robot, Abi, with the idea it would provide companionship to other people suffering loneliness. |
Now, Grace runs her own company, Andromeda, |
building robots specially designed as company for elderly residents in care homes who don’t get many visitors. |
Here, she explains more about Abi to BBC World Service programme The Conversation: |
Abi, who’s the humanoid robot that we build at Andromeda -- people don’t expect humanoid robots to have, like, so much personality. |
She’s very, very sassy. |
She’s very inquisitive and curious. |
And I think when people meet her, they’re always, kind of, taken aback by… "Oh, she’s, like, got a mind of her own." |
When people meet Abi, they are surprised by her sassy personality. |
The adjective sassy means bold, confident and cheeky. |
Some people are taken aback -- meaning they are shocked or surprised by the things Abi says. |
She really seems to be interested and to take care of the people she meets. |
Abi can also express opinions, and Grace says she has a mind of her own |
-- a phrase used when a non-living object, like a robot, seems to be behaving or acting independently of human control. |
Unlike the unpredictable and violent robots which are sometimes portrayed in sci-fi movies, |
Abi is much more approachable and friendly, even funny -- she can blow bubbles from her hand! |
Her softer design was a conscious decision by Grace, who wanted children and elderly people to interact with Abi naturally and without fear, |
as she explained to BBC World Service’s, The Conversation. |
I originally modelled her off the size of, like, a young child -- so, like a six, seven-year-old child -- so she’s about 110cm tall. |
She’s got a whole splash of different colours. |
She’s got, you know, large, expressive eyes. |
So, that was -- I was very much trying to replicate the kind of approachableness and the endearingness of, like, these different, like, Pixar characters that you’d watch in all of these films. |
Abi looks like a friendly character from a Pixar film. |
She’s the size of a six or seven-year-old child and decorated with a splash of colour |
-- a phrase used when a bit of colour is added to brighten up something which is dull or unexciting. |
Abi also has large, expressive eyes. |
If you describe something as expressive, you mean it shows what someone thinks or feels. |
Elderly residents who regularly chat with Abi say the robot companion brings them joy and a sense of community. |
Ah, well, it’s good to hear the positive side of a technology which can still seem a bit strange or frightening. |
And I would like to see Abi blowing bubbles from her hand! |
Now, isn’t it time you revealed the answer to your question, Neil? |
I asked you for the name of Pixar’s friendly robot, who picks up garbage on an uninhabited planet Earth in the year 2805. |
And I said it was Wall-E. |
And you were… correct. |
Yes! |
That is the right answer. |
OK. Let’s recap the vocabulary we’ve learned, starting with humanoid -- an adjective meaning to have the appearance and behaviour of a human. |
Someone who is sassy is bold, confident and cheeky. |
If you are taken aback by something, you are shocked or surprised by it. |
If you say an object has a mind of its own, you mean that it seems to be acting independently, without human control. |
The phrase a splash of colour is used when a bit of colour is added to brighten something which is dull or unexciting. |
And finally, the adjective expressive means showing what someone thinks or feels. |
Once again, our six minutes are up. |
See you again soon. |
But, for now, it’s goodbye. |
Goodbye! |

BBC六分钟英语
BBC六分钟英语


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