As the video shows, the one given the placebo ultimately spoke and said “I don’t know” when asked the question — at which point it “realized” that it must have been given the placebo. After hearing its own voice, it stated: “Sorry, I now know!” Which is really cool — it’s an example of self-awareness, albeit in very basic form.

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It needs to be said that, by virtue of their human-like gestures and cuteness, there’s a tendency for us to ascribe more intelligence to these robots than they deserve.

It’s also important to point out that there’s no true self-awareness or self-consciousness going on. These bots merely passed a test of self-awareness, which is not an actual measure of self-awareness (similar to how passing the Turing Test is not indicative of self-awareness or human-like intelligence in an AI or chatbot).

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These robots were programmed with a proprietary algorithm developed by the RPI called DCEC, or Deontic Cognitive Event Calculus. It uses a well-defined syntax and a proof calculus that’s predicated on natural deduction. Simply put, it’s a codified version of common-sense reasoning.

As noted by team leader Selmer Bringsjord, tests like these should enable developers to build robots with a suite of abilities that make them increasingly useful to humans. Cognitive scientists should likewise take note; analogous autonomic processes may be happening in the human brain.

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This work will be presented at the RO-MAN conference in Japan, scheduled for August 31 to September 4, 2015.

H/t The Independent


Contact the author at george@io9.com and @dvorsky. Top image by xxxxxxxxxxxx