The robot that takes safety first, before everything.

in Popular STEM6 days ago

The robot that takes safety first, before everything.



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Humans and machines can form powerful duos.


The machine does what it knows best, repeating processes with speed and precision, while the human provides flexibility and critical analysis, but this association is not free of risks, an unexpected error is enough for the scene to become a tragedy, in 2023, for example, a worker in South Korea crushed by an industrial robot, showing how human unpredictability can put even the most advanced systems in check.


To face this challenge, researchers at the University of Colorado developed a new algorithm that changes the logic of factories. Instead of simply executing orders, robots now adopt strategies inspired by game theory, where each action is chosen taking into account safety, possible regrets and mainly the impact on who is next to it.




The system works like a game of chess.


The robot does not simply seek to win, without finding the safest move within the game, if a human makes a mistake or acts unpredictably, the robot will be able to correct the problem, without generating risks and if even that is not enough, it is capable of changing its own operation, ensuring that the person is out of danger, even if that delays the task a little.



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The idea is clear, the robot adapts to the human and not the other way around.


This model also introduces an interesting concept, regret, instead of calculating only the immediate result, the robot evaluates whether today's decision can cause problems in the future, all fluidity to actions brings its way of reasoning closer to human decision making.


The implications are enormous, in factories, the new system can reduce accidents drastically, but researchers see something bigger, robots capable of caring for the elderly, taking on dangerous tasks and even relieving professions that wear down physical health.


The research was presented at the joint international conference on artificial intelligence in August 2025 and marks an important step on the path to truly collaborative robots.



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