Vegetables Can Taste Like Chocolate by Adrian Cheok, Director of Imagineering Institute

 

Adrian David Cheok is Director of the Imagineering Institute, Malaysia, and Chair Professor of Pervasive Computing at City University London.

He is the Founder and Director of the Mixed Reality Lab, Singapore. His research focuses on multi-sensory internet communication, mixed reality, pervasive and ubiquitous computing, human-computer interfaces, and wearable computing. Today he talks about how the internet connects us and what we can do by blending reality, our senses, and the internet.

Olfactometer

By Adrian David Cheok, Kasun Karunanayaka, Halimahtuss Saadiah, Hamizah Sharoom

 

 

Many of the Olfactometer implementations we find today, comes with high price and they are

complex to use. This project aiming to develop a simple, low cost, and easily movable laboratory

Olfactometer, that can be used as a support tool for wider range of experiments related to smell, taste,

psychology, neuroscience, and fMRI. Generally, Olfactometers use two types of olfactents; solid or

liquid odor. Our laboratory Olfactometer (as shown in Figure 1) will support for liquid based odors

and later we may also extend to handle solid odors.  Also we are thinking of improving this system as

a combined Olfactometer and Gustometer.

 

In this Olfactometer design, we utilize continuous flow (Lorig design) for good temporal control.

Lorig design have simpler design and low cost due to minimal usage of parts as compared to other

designs (Lundstrom et al., 2010). Our Olfactometer contains an 8 output channels that will produces

aromas in a precise and controlled manner. Besides that, it also produces a constant humidified flow

of pure air. The laboratory Olfactometer components consists of oil less piston air compressor, filter

regulator & mist separator, 2- color display digital flow switch, check valve, solenoid, manifold,

TRIVOT glass tube, connector, gas hose clip and also PU tubing. The controlling system of

Olfactometer will consists of Adruino Pro mini, UART converter, USB cable and solenoid circuit.

 

Air supply from oil-less piston air compressor plays an important part to deliver the odor with a

constant air pressure to the subjected nose. After that, the filter regulator combined with mist

separator are used to ensure the air is clean and did not have any other contaminant. After the filter,

the air flows will be metered through to 2-color display digital flow switch. Check valves are

connected after the flowmeter to ensure that the air will flow only in one direction. After the check

valve, the tube is then connected to 9 fitting male connectors which directly fit into the 8 output of

manifold. Then, 8 pcs of normally closed solenoid valves will be connected to the top of the manifold.

The Olfactometer can manually be controlled by computer to send an odour to the nose. A 2-color

display digital flow switch will be connecting after solenoid to make sure the air will flow around 3

LPM to 5 LPM (to avoid any discomfort to the subjected nose). If the solenoid valve is on by

computer, the air will pass through to the glass bottles and proved it by seeing the bubbling air inside

of glass bottles. Finally, air flow will blow the liquid/solid and go through the check valve before

straight to human nose.

 

The Laboratory Olfactometer

Bench of Multi-sensory Memories

By Stefania Sini, Nur Ain Mustafa, Hamizah AnuarAdrian David Cheok

 

 

What if cities have dedicated urban interfaces in public spaces that invite people to share stories and

memories of public interest, and facilitate the creation of a public narration? What if people share and

access these stories and memories while chatting with a public bench? Will the interaction with the

bench provide a meaningful, memorable and playful experience of a place?

 

The Bench of Multi-sensory Memories is an urban interface whose objective is to investigate the role

of urban media in placemaking. It mediates the creation of a public narration, and affords citizens a

playful and engaging interface to access and generate stories and memories that form this narration.

 

The bench has been designed and fabricated in collaboration with the Malaysian artist Alvin Tan,

which has experience with bamboo installations in public spaces. Its structure is robust and it allows

to easily and safely allocate all the hardware components. The hardware and software system

consists of: a) input devices, the USB Microphone and the Force Sensitive Resistor (FSR) sensors; b)

Analog-Digital or Digital-Analog (AD/DA) Converter Module Board; c) Microcontroller, a Raspberry Pi

3; d) output device, a Speaker; e) the software, the Google Speech API. The components operate as

following: the FSR sensors detect the presence of a person in the bench through physical pressure,

weight and pressing; the AD/DA Converter Module Board read the analogue values of the FSR

sensors and convert them into digital values, readable by the Microcontroller; the Microcontroller,

which has advanced features, such as the Wi-fi, Ethernet, Bluetooth, USB, HDMI and Audio Jack,

easily connects the inputs and output devices. Currently, the system software implements speech

applications, such as text-to- speech and speech-to- text: Google Speech API generates the voice

based on the text, records the voice and translates the speech into text, through the output and input

devices. Therefore, at the moment, the system performs a scripted sequence that includes text-to-

speech and speech to text translations. In the short term, we will be able to employ a custom chatbot,

that is able to conduct interactive and meaningful conversations.

 

Bench of Multi-sensory Memories

Multi-sensory Story Book For Visually Impaired Children

By Edirisinghe Chamari, Kasun Karunanayaka, Norhidayati Podari,  Adrian David Cheok

 

Experience of reading for children is enriched by visual displays. Researchers suggest

through picture book experiences, children expose themselves to develop socially,

intellectually, and culturally. However, the beauty of reading is an experience sighted

children naturally indulge, and which visually-impaired children struggle with. Our multi-

sensory book is an attempt to create a novel reading experience specifically for visually-

impaired children. While a sighted person’s mental imagining is constructed through visual

experiences, a visually-impaired person’s mental images are a product of haptic, and

sounds. Our book is introducing multi-sensory interactions, through touch, smell, and sound.

The concept is also aiming to address a certain lack of appropriately designed technologies

for visually-impaired children.

 

Our book titled “Alice and her Friend” is folding out to reveal a story about a cat, whose

activities are presented with multi-sensory interactions. There are six pages in this book, with

different sensors and actuators integrated in each page. The pages were designed with

textures, braille, large font text, sounds, and smell. With this book, we believe we have

contributed a new reading experience to the efforts of visually- impaired children to

understand the beauty of the world.

 

A Picture Book for Visually Impaired Children

French woman wants to marry a robot as expert predicts sex robots to become preferable to humans

Untitled

By Nzherald – Decemeber 24, 2016.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/lifestyle/news/article.cfm?c_id=6&objectid=11772407

Human-robot marriages may become commonplace by 2050 if not before. Photo / 123RF
Human-robot marriages may become commonplace by 2050 if not before. Photo / 123RF

 

On the surface, Lilly seems like a blushing young woman ready to marry the man of her dreams who makes her “totally happy.”

Only her partner is 3D printed robot named Inmmovator who she designed herself, after realising she was attracted to “humanoid robots generally” rather than other people.

“I’m really and totally happy,” she told news.com.au over email in her tentative English. “Our relationship will get better and better as technology evolves.”

The “proud robosexual” said she always loved the voices of robots as a child but realised at 19 she was sexually attracted to them as well. Physical relationships with other men confirmed the matter.

“I’m really and only attracted by the robots,” she said. “My only two relationships with men have confirmed my love orientation, because I dislike really physical contact with human flesh.”

She has since built her own dream man with open-source technology from a French company, and has lived with him for one year. They are ‘engaged’ and plan to marry when robot-human marriage is legalised in France.

The unconventional relationship has been accepted by family and friends but she said “some understand better than others.”

She won’t reveal whether they have a sexual relationship and is currently in training to become a roboticist in order to take her passion into her everyday life.

While Lilly’s views will strike many as odd, it’s just a sign of things to come according to David Levy.

The chess whiz and authority on Love and Sex with Robots said he expects human-robot marriages to become commonplace by 2050 if not before.

Speaking at the second conference on the issue held in London this week, Mr Levy told a room filled with academics and interested people that advances in artificial intelligence mean robots could become “enormously appealing” partners within the next few decades.

“The future has a habit of laughing at you. If you think love and sex with robots is not going to happen in your lifetime, I think you’re wrong.”

“The first human robot marriages will take place around the year 2050 or sooner but not longer,” he said.

The conference explored a host of issues on the subject including everything from what robots should look like to whether they should be able to “learn” about sexual preferences and feed back information to companies behind them.

University of London Computing Professor Adrian David Cheok said he believes robots will not only become common, but preferable for many people.

“It’s going to be so much easier, so much more convenient to have sex with a robot. You can have exactly what kind of sex you want. That’s going to be the future. That we will have more sex with robots and the next stage is love … we’re already seeing it.”

“Actual sex with humans may be like going to a concert. When you’re at home you can listen to Beethoven’s ninth symphony, it’s good enough and once or twice a year you’ll want to go the Royal Albert Hall and hear it in a concert hall.

“That may be the way sex with humans is going to be. It’s going to be much more easier, much more convenient to have sex with a robot, and maybe much better because that’s how you want it.”