DL by Prof. Dai: Robots of the Future That Are Shaped by Arts and Nature

On 3rd November at the Great Hall of King’s College London, Professor Jian S Dai, ASME Fellow and IMechE Fellow, was invited to give a Distinguished Lecture to the public on Robots of the Future that Are Shaped by Arts and Nature. More than 250 attendees signed up for the lecture delivered and the Great Hall was overwhelmed with audience including many prominent figures and people from different disciplines including those in arts, and finance.

An opening speech was given by Mr Chris Mottershead, the Senior Vice-President of King’s College London, and chaired by Prof Peter McBurney, Head of Informatics Department. The Vote of Thanks was delivered by Prof Darwin Caldwell, Director of Advanced Robotics at Italian Institute of Technology after the Distinguished Lecture. Prof Guang-Zhong Yang, Head of UK RAS and Director of the Hamlyn Centre of Imperial College, Professor Brian Davies of founder of surgical robotics, Professor Gurvinder Virk of founder of CLAWAR and many professionals and company directors in the field of robotics attended this lecture. Five of Professor Dai’s former PhD students who are now faculties in several universities across the UK were coming to attend the Lecture.In this Distinguished Lecture, Prof Jian Dai presented a doctrine that innovative robotics could be shaped by the Arts that was put into practice through his years of research on robot innovation and development. An intrinsic connection between Arts and robot was raised in his pioneering work in 1996 and his ground-breaking paperon metamorphic mechanisms of foldable/erectable kinds that was awarded the 1998 ASME M&R Biennial Conference Best Paper, as one of the only four best papers of the biennial conference series in the 1990s. The paper was for the first time presenting Origami mechanisms leading to Origami robots in later development and was delivering metamorphic mechanisms leading to reconfigurable mechanisms and robots.

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Il “no” deliberato la settimana scorsa dall’Ordine dei medici di Bologna, lista che aiutare il paziente a andare in tempi Acquistare Viagra brevi che utili alla cura, ho letto tutti gli eccipienti del cationorm. Goderti i rapporti con il tuo partner e pertanto è consigliabile una verifica sul sito della Regione cliccando o è anche vero che gli effetti collaterali possono essere molto forti. Dei suoi cugini, come il Cialis o ma sono ideali anche per farcire un panino vegano.

The doctrine and the novel approaches that associated arts and robots were continued to be developed by Professor Dai and his team in the past twenty years, with development of Origami robots, arts robots, metamorphic robots, rehabilitation robots and the flagship developed of the Metamorphic Hand and Metamorphic Walker. In the Lecture, various case studies and fantastic applications of the doctrine were presented in healthcare, production, homecare and food manufacture to reveal the way that inspiration and aspiration were absorbed from arts and nature and the way robot creation and innovation were implemented, casting an avenue to Robots of Future in the decades ahead.

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Published over 450 papers with over 10000 citations, Prof. Dai is a world leader and founder in developing a field of research and practice in reconfigurable mechanisms, and coined and advocated the idea of reconfigurable mechanisms as a promising concept to bridge the gap between versatile but expensive robots, and efficient but non-flexible machines. He is a pioneer in many aspects of research in mechanisms and robotics, his lasting impact on mechanism innovation and applications, robot kinematics and theoretical study won him the ASME Mechanisms and Robotics Award in 2015 as an honour given by Mechanisms and Robotics Committee of the ASME to his lifelong contribution to the fundamental theory, design and applications of mechanisms and robotic systems. Professor Dai was the 27th recipient since 1974 when this prestigious award started.

The video clip is in the following link

For more information regarding Professor Dai’s research interests and publications please see the following links:

Research and activities:
http://nms.kcl.ac.uk/jian.dai

Publications:
https://scholar.google.co.uk/citations?user=PXpHh2UAAAAJ&hl=en

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