Incredible bionic arm powered by A.I. and THOUGHT 🦾 | BBC
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- čas přidán 26. 12. 2023
- Professor Mike Wooldridge asks: what is artificial intelligence? He compares how AI works and learns with how the human brain functions. Exploring the roots of AI, Mike reveals how Alan Turing devised the Imitation Game - a test of whether a machine answering a series of questions could pass as a human. The audience in the lecture theatre play a real-life version of the game to find out if AI can pass this test today. In this lecture, Mike examines real-life neurons in action and explains how artificial neural networks are inspired by neural structures in the brain. To demonstrate how AI learns, we watch drones as they are trained to recognise and fly through structures in the lecture theatre autonomously. AI exploded into the public consciousness in 2022 with the release of ChatGPT and boasts around 100 million monthly users. Mike unravels the mystery of how large language models like ChatGPT work, and he finds out if one day this technology - along with a whole suite of different AI tools - will allow us to understand the animals we share this planet with. The Christmas Lectures are the most prestigious event in the Royal Institution calendar, dating from 1825, when Michael Faraday founded the series. They are the world’s longest running science television series and always promise to inspire and amaze each year through explosive demonstrations and interactive experiments with the live theatre audience.
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"I was in a terrible accident and as a result lost my arm and leg" Him: "WOW - that's incredible 😃"
i was hoping someone mentioning it
right? I don't know what is more incredible now, the anchors BBC pop around who are either dumb, insensitive or both, or BBC itself showing around how much of dunce it is haha, so incredible!
I was gonna say that, he clearly was not listening to what she was saying but was focused on the bionic arm xD
Exactly, lol. I probably would've said "Holy Hell! How are you still alive? That is insane"
@@rasoulcarrerasomeone actually commented the same joke a few hours before this one 😂
“I was in a terrible accident”
“Incredible, now show us your party trick”
Yeah. So half your body was ripped off ("That must have smarted!"), but on the upside you can crush empty soft drink cans.
Received rocket punched😂
Yes, gross. Smiling even, didn't even skip a beat. Turned me off massively to the whole thing.
Interviewer needs some skills
At being human😊
yeah thought the same thing.
Her “I basically got ran over by a train…” him “ that’s incredible!”
Glad I'm not the only one who caught that 😂🤣 lmao
Same lol
Yeah that was a bit weird.
Not even listening to her
*No accident is incredible!* Very disappointing choice of words !!!
"That's incredible."
"I can watch that all night." 💀
That 2nd statement was a grand faux pas 🤣 sounds like a glimpse into his thoughts at the time.
Party trick
I lost my arm
Wow that's incredible.
What a radiant woman. I doubt this is at all important to her, but she looks cool as heck wearing her prosthetics.
Was thinking the same, and also imagining how different public perception would be had she been without the bionic arm and leg, and instead in a wheelchair with someone pushing her.
@@kasimirdenhertog3516 Have you ever thought about the fact she wouldn't be anywhere as happy as she is now if she was stuck to a wheel chair?
Why wouldn't it be important to her? People need to be valued.
@@michaelzomsuv3631 I was contemplating public perception, not her personal perception. I think from the video it's quite obvious she's very happy not to be in a wheelchair.
She is such a positive person! 👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻
I would be too if I could afford a bionic arm whenever I lost one.
That’s because they attached her to the anode.
Yes, she is but I wish that the answer to every question wasn't prefaced with, So... It's the standard (idiotic) speech pattern of today. Sentences are better off without So...
Gratitude is very powerful and this would give her a lot of hope.
@@christopherwheeler688so I’m not sure what you mean.
What a well-spoken woman. No uhms, no ahs. Not too quick. Not too slow.
She explained everything efficiently and in such a way that it is easy to understand. Well done to her 👏
"I was in a horrific accident."
"Lovely stuff."
Incredible tech, and it only cost her an arm and a leg.
LMFAO
bruh
Go get yer coat.
😂😂😂😂💀
Can't imagine the trauma this poor woman has been through. Congratulations to the people working on this technology: the arm, the sensors and the software
- amazing, brilliant work! Keep going.
When she is finally ready to drive a car again they will be like "sorry, all the cars drive themselves now"
I'm hoping and fairly certain she'll get to ride a bike again though.
Progressed AI will have improved her life (and ours) regardless in that case.
sorry, self driving bikes now exist
Lol, Thats funny sht bro.
Dam I wanted that to end with a hand shake that twists his arm 😂😂
And breaks it off… then she could say “wow incredible”.
The arm is cool the woman’s perspective on life is amazing
Like a lot of people here I too remarked her great personality. She’s indeed special in her kind, positive demeanor & the fact that she breezed through the recounting of her incident without trying to emotionally stir her audience & make it about her, *which is an exceptionally rare thing.*
But it’s very important for our wellbeing to recognize that most of her strength is the strength of the society behind her. Same for everyone else. Imagine her going through that ordeal a century ago. IF she were to survive she wouldn’t have benefited from a 911 emergency call service, helicopter ambulance, modern surgery, anesthesia, antibiotics, painkillers, kinesiotherapy, psychotherapy, modern prosthetics, a swarm of people around her caring for her recovery & wellbeing, nor the modern culture of acceptance, compassion & appreciation towards maimed & disabled individuals. She would’ve laid in a bed without much social interaction, perhaps even removed from people’s eyes, spending the rest of her life in gloom & sorrow.
There’s a general principle saying that the strength of any node in a network is equal to the strength of the network as a whole & number of connections that node makes with that network. This is most true when it comes to human beings, the most social creature. If you want to tend to the wellbeing of the individuals *you must tend to the wellbeing of society.* Somewhere in the future, in some harmonious & high-tech part of the world, some individual will be hit by a drone and ripped to pieces, and nonetheless in a year’s time they’ll be more athletic than current heptathlon champions. And it would be much more clear then that it’s *not* about "oh my gosh, that individual is so physically & psychologically strong😱". It’s about the network, it’s about society. It always was.
The woman is cool, the arm is amazing
"I lost my arm and my leg"
"Wow, that's incredible"
SMH
😂 ☠️
It was incredible. It's not hard to look up the meaning of the word, but you seem to not know it.
"Incredible" means "impossible to believe" or "difficult to believe; extraordinary."
It doesn't automatically imply something is good.
@@finian2 it’s more the nonchalant tone 😭
@@G.Family. Why are you crying?
0:07 "Wow that's incredible" 💀
☠️
Wow, what a lovely and resilient woman, this work is phenomenal,glad they chose such an inspirational person to trial the prototype❤💎🎖👍
In the future she'll be able to punch through a Cybertruck door.
Could probably already punch through the window
What a crazy thing to say hehe. Shameless and admittedly tasteless plug for my crazy video
not to downplay the struggle that tends to come with it, but people with bionic limbs always look really cool
Bravo! I'm a Vietnam vet and so many injuries that be assisted today. Am certainly impressed with this attractive and resilient young lady!
I am so happy technology helps these people live better lives. And I hope that in the future it will be more and more accessible
I could not agree more. e/acc in action!
Oh you lost your limbs have you?! That's incredible!...
Seems you dont know the meaning of that word..
"i could watch that hand all night" crazyyyy
That's amazing. I've got a friend who lost his right arm's function in a motorcycle accident. He still drives with a twisting knob on the steering wheel for single arm steering and puts the automatic gearbox in gear with his left hand to get moving. There are cars with button hubs for gear selection to make it easier but his ford fiesta does just fine
I saw another video about bionic arms recently. Not sure if it was this same model, but the one I saw talked about sensors in the hand that gave the user pressure feedback so that they could regulate their strength appropriately. It was pretty cool.
She could also drive a car without her right arm if she bought an automatic. I have an automatic transmission, and I almost never use my right arm while driving.
EV would be good as you can drive some with virtually no braking
@@TheWinstn60 you could drive a car with a thoughts alone already but delay time is the problem same as with hands.
Yeah I don't know why she said she couldn't drive a car. If it's a manual sell it and buy an automatic. I wouldn't give up driving because I was waiting on a bionic arm upgrade.
She's probably in the UK, right arm is your steering arm, so even with an automatic it would be awkward
This is the UK, she's on the other side of the car. I use my right arm for steering and the left arm for the shift.
Wow! Good for her. Such a courageous woman!!!❤🎉😘🫂
Now that's a prosthetic that works! I'm so excited for the improvements on response and movement!
Because you need it or you'll cut yourself an arm to have a prosthetic one? lol
@@JP-xd6fm or because people getting help in general is good?
@@anarchostatist191 Yes, sure!, but it sounds like I don't know, he is looking forward to have that...
I rather preventing the kind of accidents that cut you in pieces tbh
Guy questioning is literally such a show man, dude gives zero f’s
That's incredible 😂
Gotta appreciate the company's work on function n design. It looks cool!
"I was involved in a devastating train wreck..."
"beautiful stuff, got any tricks??"
I lost my leg and arm. WOW that's incredible.
Incredible means hard to believe, or extraordinary (which means out of the ordinary). Losing both a leg and an arm is very extraordinary and difficult to believe, hence the word incredible was accurate.
It really moves naturally!!!!! Wow!!! Incredible!!
So cool to see! Before things went south for me I had wanted to study to be an engineer to develop this exact kind of thing. It's fun to see other people doing it.
What about the day to day wearing of it, prosthetic limbs are very uncomfortable and can be painful to wear.
The sock that goes against the skin can get very smelly and sweaty, and there's friction against scar tissue, which is the real issue and can even result in needing further amputation due to damage by the prosthesis (re-stumping).
The real game changing advance in prosthetic limbs is when/if they can be permanently attached to the body so that all the stump issues become moot.
But that requires anchoring them to a metal(?) rod that's attached to the remaining bone and breaks through the skin without complications.
Then people can have a prosthetic that's part of their body.
It’s not unreasonable to think science will figure out how to regrow limbs with stem cells, gene editing, etc. before we can perfect bionic limbs. Of course these bionic limbs are helping a lot of people right now even if they’re not perfect.
Absolutely incredible!
This is incredible ❤
Seems like adding electrodes to the good arm and doing synchronized movements (Left arm Mirrors right arm) and capturing and training off that data would improve the behavior of the Bionic arm as well as suggest other electrode placements to pick up better queues for the use by the algorithms. It is a stretch, but tying this AI in with Tesla’s Optimus robot AI and hardware could lead to some un expected advancements for both.
You are being far too excited already. This isn't complex AI. It just reads signals and transforms them in movement. Those signals are not the same as on a working arm and she has been training with this arm to get it to work the way it does.
This AI is basically not much more than training an AI to recognize a traffic light
Amazing display of technology and wellbeing/health example!
Nice work Otto Octavius
Wow! She is awesome and very brave!!
An excellent communicator .
Wow amazing merry Xmas
I think there's a great story here. It's much more than having limbs replaced with machine-learning prosthetics. It's about human ability and desire to help each other. Working hard to find solutions. Learning what ai is and what it is not. Deciding whether we want it in our lives.
I found this description of her shocking accident. WARNING if you are squeamish.
After falling asleep on the tube after work and missing her stop at Camden Town, she woke up at the end of the Northern line at High Barnet.
Disorientated, she went to board a return train but slipped and fell under the carriage, breaking her nose, teeth and damaging her face in the fall. Unable to get up, she could not escape the train as it pulled away over her, causing horrific injuries.
She cried out for help for more than ten minutes but no one could hear her, until a second train rolled into the station crushing her again. Somehow surviving, she was airlifted to hospital where her leg and arm was amputated.
May god bless her
It's amazing how technology is evolving.
She's great, such a good talker and good spokeswoman for this technology.
This is really cool tech, it would be even cooler if the BBC used better, more specific terminology, such as "Machine Learning" and went more into depth, giving an explanation of how this actually works, instead of what it does
This is from the Royal Insttitution Lectures aimed at kids.
If you want to learn in detail then there is an entire playlist made by CZcams itself, known as The age of A.I.
So postive person and she her robot arm is so cool, its AI and learns from her moments. it wlll really change the world
Such resilience
Absolutely Awesome!
He obviously wasn't listening to her and was just amazed by the bionic arm. 😅
Actually is a compliment to the bionics designers because it looked so natural that it was not really registering in his brain that her original arm and leg were gone.
I mean she's just a random person using advanced technology that wasn't made by herself.
So I can see why you would be more interested in the technology than the consumer. It's like a Tesla owner. Most are random people but their cars get all the attention.
It's very sad but kinda human/animal nature.
beautiful! Hope to see she plays
She is Amazing! Hope she drives again!
Every Halloween party I’d be going as the Borg!
Super Cyberpunk, love it!
Thats crazy the way that arm works. I would think there would need to be something linked to the brain for this to work.
now thats incredible
What a remarkable shtory!
Technology is truly life changing 😮
“I was in a horrible accident…”
“Yeah yeah ok just tell us about your really cool arm”
Those are some nice upgrades she got
She's the best can crusher at the recycling center.
Amazing Lady...amazing technology...
Amazing individual and intelligent ❤
It's incredible how we not even consciously think about the hand moment and it still happens.
amazing. Look how much she's loving it too. seems like it's easy to operate for her.
This is amazing
I lost both my parents to a house fire- "wow thats incredible
That’s scary cool. Where will this be in 100 years
Would love to see the tech reach 1:1 instantaneous movement
Full power to Sera and the AI Bionic Robotics team working with her.
Awesome tech.
"I lost my arm"
"So you have a party trick hmmm?"
Impressive, how positive she is. Remarkable.
Incredible
1:45 "I could watch that all night" 😅
1:46 better reaction, yet! 😂
Another person: All of my family died in a crash!
Host: OMG, brilliant!
"Yeah, that should get a LOT of clicks - oops did I just say that?"
Impressive 👍🏻
they have the tech and its its approved. this arm should be attached to her bone not held on by strap on suction cups. This will also eliminate the time lag.
This seems pretty incredible and what a nice video too, how have I not heard about this until now? I would love to shake your hand Sarah, not kidding.
Wow her wrist twists all round 😮
Missed opportunity to shake hands at the end 🤝
She is so elegant!
anchor should feel that incredible feeling
"What do you think this arm is going to do in the future ?" -
"Maybe shoot lazers would be great, but Ill settle for a can oppener add-on"
We have come one step closer to the dream of having automail similar to the one depicted in Fullmetal Alchemist!
Him looking at her wrist rotating “I could see that all night” 😂
Beautiful story, thanks for sharing
" My whole family was murdered in front of me", " Wow thats amazing" 😂
0:12 What an absolute berk!
Kind of irrelevant but if I were to opt for a removal of organic parts for bionic, it would be the legs from the knees down. Knees are subject to much injury, so making those parts mechanical rather than biological will give you a stability and strength advantage. Also, we no longer use our feet to climb, so having a more simplistic foot platform will not bring any disadvantage. I’d rather have some simple material covering my metallic foot than have to buy a bunch of socks and shoes over and over. Also, many people have stubborn calves which do not grow at the same rate as thighs and hamstrings do, leading to a kind of unusual appearance aesthetically. Furthermore, feet are vulnerable to much problems regarding moisture or being injured by glass on the floor. A lot of diseases enter the human body by contact with the naked foot. Finally, plenty of men have disproportionate legs compared to the rest of their bodies, so having longer lower legs will improve proportional measurements. Just my opinion
Every time the guy replied to her he sounded sarcastic
Amazing person!
One day you'll be able to play piano or guitar with a bionic arm.
If my electronic drum set is anything to go by, the latency between thought and arm/hand movement would need to decrease by a factor of about 1,000 (from 10 s to 10 ms) for it to be usable for that purpose.
I love medical science, it helps so many people lead something of a normal life again.
and the crowd were like oooooh we want to lose our limbs in a train accident if we can get a hand that can twist around like that!
Him: incredible, I wanna watch that alll night
Howard Wolowitz finally perfected the hand.
In the future, we will be having humans cut off their arms for upgraded bionics
She's incredible ❤