Toyota's going big on robotics

CEO of Toyota Research Institute Gill Pratt speaks during a news conference in Tokyo, where Toyota announced that it will set up a research and development company with a focus on artificial intelligence in Silicon Valley. Picture: Yuya Shino / Reuters.

CEO of Toyota Research Institute Gill Pratt speaks during a news conference in Tokyo, where Toyota announced that it will set up a research and development company with a focus on artificial intelligence in Silicon Valley. Picture: Yuya Shino / Reuters.

Published Nov 6, 2015

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Tokyo - Toyota is investing $1 billion (R13.95bn) in a research company it's setting up in Silicon Valley to develop artificial intelligence and robotics

This underlines the car-making giant's determination to lead in futuristic cars that drive themselves and apply the technology to other areas of daily life.

Toyota President Akio Toyoda said on Friday that the company will start operating from January 2016, with 200 employees at a Silicon Valley facility near Stanford University. A second facility will be established near Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge.

The investment, which will be spread over five years, comes on top of the $50 million (R697m) that Toyota announced earlier for artificial intelligence research at Stanford and MIT.

Toyota said its interest extended beyond autonomous driving, which is starting to be offered by some carmakers and being promised by almost all of them. The technology was pointing to a new industry for everyday use, delivering a safer lifestyle overall, it said.

Toyota has already shown an R2-D2-like robot designed to help the elderly, the sick and people in wheelchairs by picking up and carrying objects. The carmaker has also shown human-shaped entertainment robots that can carry on conversations and play musical instruments. Toyota already uses sophisticated robotic arms and computers in car production, including doing paint jobs and screwing in parts.

NOT JUST ABOUT CARS

To drive home the message that Toyota's vision was more than about just cars, Toyoda appeared at a Tokyo hotel with high profile robotics expert Gill Pratt, who will head the new organisation called Toyota Research Institute Inc.

Pratt was formerly a program manager at the US military's Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency. He joined Toyota as a technical adviser when it set up its AI research effort at Stanford and MIT.

Pratt said the company's goals are to support older people in their homes with robotics, make cars free of accidents and use AI to allow all people to drive regardless of ability.

He gave three examples from his personal life that motivate him to develop robotics and related technology: when he was a child, seeing a boy on a bicycle killed by a car; telling his 83-year-old father he could no longer drive; and sending his father to a nursing home when he was 84.

Pratt, who grew up on Japanese robot animation and dreamed of one day building such robots, said he chose Toyota over other jobs because it was “so focused on social good.”

He said coming up with a car as smart as a human being will take a long time. But that also meant the competition had just begun and no one was ahead significantly, he said.

The new company will be hiring researchers and engineers, according to Toyota. Wooing talent is crucial because not only are carmakers such as General Motors, Tesla and Nissan competing on autonomous driving but outsiders are as well, including Google, Apple and Uber.

AP

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