News, Ideas and Conversations from the University of Pennsylvania July 2, 2009

Penn robots go viral


A robot named “CKbot,” built by Penn engineers, has become a YouTube star.

Conceived by Penn Associate Professor of Mechanical Engineering and Applied Mechanics Mark Yim and his colleagues at the General Robotics, Automation, Sensing and Perception (GRASP) Lab, CKbot boasts a unique talent: It is capable of re-constructing itself after being demolished. The robot is built from 15 individual modules split into three clusters of five modules each. Each module is equipped with a 20-frames-per-second camera, a blinking LED, and an accelerometer that enables the robot to reconstruct itself using magnets. The modules also carry an embedded computer, proximity sensors and a motorized joint with a rotational range of 180 degrees.

In the hit YouTube video—which had been viewed nearly a half-million times by mid-June—CKbot is kicked over and broken into the three separate clusters. Then, bit by bit, the robot puts itself back together. CKbot’s success, the team says, is a small step forward for researchers working to create self-assembling robots.

The video can be viewed here: http://youtube.com/watch?v=uIn-sMq8-Ls&feature=user.

Originally published July 3, 2008

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"Moving back home has the potential for robbing people of that feeling of adult competence. And that can cause a dilemma."

—Marion Lindblad-Goldberg, a clinical professor in the department of psychiatry at Penn, on how adults who return to their parents’ home in tough financial times can often feel infantilized and regress back to adolescent behavior. (MSNBC.com, June 22, 2009)