Whether it was after getting hooked on your first comic, taking a 
college art class, or even idly doodling on your math book instead of 
paying attention to your teacher, we’ve all experimented with drawing. 
Unless you’re one of the people that can actually do it well, you likely
 gave up and moved on, wondering how other humans can mix lines together
 to create something both recognizable and aesthetically pleasing. If 
you’re illustrationally-challenged, your salvation may lie not with 
humanity, but with robotics. A new robotic glove teaches you how to draw
 by becoming training your muscle memory.
Copenhagen Institute of 
Interaction Design student Saurabh Datta developed the glove as part of 
his thesis, initially as a way to learn to play the piano. If his human 
hands couldn’t learn, maybe some robot hands could teach them — and no, 
the robot hand doesn’t come from the Robot Devil,
 despite the startlingly similar way the idea was conceived. Called 
Teacher, the glove-like robot straps onto your hand and fingers, and 
guides you through specific gestures over and over. If you do it enough,
 your hand will learn how to do it through sheer muscle memory.
Obviously, this won’t teach you instinct or how to transfer something
 from your imagination to paper, but at the very least, the theory is 
that it’ll teach you basics — how to make aesthetically pleasing lines.
Now,
 it only took Datta a week to build the rig. It’s not exactly the 
teacher after which it’s named, but instead represents the way humans 
and robots can and do interact when working to achieve the same goal. 
Despite being presented with the potential to learn how to draw, Datta 
found that most participants didn’t like when the glove controlled the 
majority of the movement — they’d fight against the haptic feedback, and
 constantly readjust their hand within the contraption to find a more 
comfortable position. To fix the comfort issue, Datta recorded the 
fidgets made by the testers, and then adjusted the machine’s force 
feedback to account for them. In turn, this also helped the machine 
learn about the way humans naturally move.
Datta’s machines won’t 
suddenly help you create the best DeviantArt page the internet has ever 
known, but it’s essentially a proof-of-concept for machines doing 
our learning for us. You can check out the full project over here, including development diagrams and (long) demonstration videos.
 source: extremetech

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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