Why are the faces of others such an integral part of our communication system and how do we recognise them? How can we make a robot appreciate faces in the same way as a human? Presented by Sam Duffy and a finalist at the CERN film festival, this collection of films highlights the advances made in the field of face recognition in social robots, but also stresses how difficult the task is and how far we are from creating a truly social robot. For more information go to www.eecs.qmul.ac.uk and www.cs4fn.org.
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Why are the faces of others such an integral part of our communication system and how do we recognise them? How can we make a robot appreciate faces in the same way as a human? Presented by Sam Duffy and a finalist at the CERN film festival, this collection of films highlights the advances made in the field of face recognition in social robots, but also stresses how difficult the task is and how far we are from creating a truly social robot. For more information go to www.eecs.qmul.ac.uk and www.cs4fn.org.
An interview with David Fine. David suffers from a condition called prosopagnosia, otherwise known as face blindness, which means he cannot recognise people from their faces.
Why Faces are Special?
Why are the faces of others such an integral part of our communication system and how do we recognise them? How can we make a robot appreciate faces in the same way as a human? Presented by Sam Duffy and a finalist at the CERN film festival, this collection of films highlights the advances made in the field of face recognition in social robots, but also stresses how difficult the task is and how far we are from creating a truly social robot. For more information go to www.eecs.qmul.ac.uk and www.cs4fn.org.