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Team of SNU and KAIST Students Win International Robot Contest

Team of SNU and KAIST Students Win International Robot Contest

The Shelly and the student creators
The Shelly and the student creators

On March 8, a team of SNU and KAIST students won first place at the International Human-Robot Interaction Student Design Competition held in Chicago, Illinois, USA.

The team was composed of five undergraduate students including Wongkyung Do and Jason Jangho Choi of the SNU Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, Sunho Jang of the SNU Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, and Hyunjin Ku of the KAIST Department of Mechanical Engineering. The students began developing a social robot that could play with younger children during an internship program for Naver Labs Robotics Group.

The product of their efforts was Shelly, a turtle-shaped social robot.

Shelly is an interactive social robot specifically designed to play with elementary school-aged children. Equipped with vibration sensors and multi-colored LED lights, Shelly is able to express various emotional states such as happiness, anger, fear, and sadness.

"Though most social robots in today’s market are better suited for one-on-one interactions with humans, Shelly was built with the ability to interact with and respond to multiple children at once," said Jangho Choi. “Shelly would even be fit for hectic environments such as playrooms and kindergartens,” he explained.

The students who won the International Human-Robot Interaction Student Design Competition in Chicago. (From left) Jason Jangho CHOI (SNU), KU Hyunjin (KAIST), and DO Wongkyung (SNU)
The students who won the International Human-Robot Interaction Student Design Competition in Chicago. (From left) Jason Jangho CHOI (SNU), KU Hyunjin (KAIST), and DO Wongkyung (SNU)

In particular, Shelly received positive feedback for motivating children to avoid engaging in aggressive behavior. When a strong force is detected on its touch interface, Shelly retracts into its shell and temporarily stops responding.

Researchers studied the behavior of 100 children interacting with the robot and found that children did indeed refrain from aggressive behavior in order to continue playing with Shelly.

Sungho Jang stated, “I’ve been able to observe a lot of social robots in today’s market and have seen a lot of cases where children’s curiosity sometimes leads to frustration. Often, it results in hitting and sometimes harming the robots. I thought about how such cases could be prevented. Shelly was the answer to my question.”

Source: http://dongascience.donga.com/news.php?idx=21805
Written by Frances Seowon Jin, SNU English Editor, seowonjin@snu.ac.kr
Reviewed by Professor Travis Smith, Department of Asian Languages and Civilizations, tlsmith@snu.ac.kr