MIT Experts Just Made a Special Memory. When Humans Forget, Robots Will Just Fetch the Lost Item
The system links natural-language descriptions to 3D maps and outperforms current methods on some queries, researchers said.
4 Articles
4 Articles
Researchers develop memory system to improve robots' recall of places and events
London, June 18 (SANA) Researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) have developed a new framework that enables robots to remember locations, objects and events encountered in real-world environments, a step that could improve how autonomous systems interact with their surroundings. The system, called DAAAM — short for “Describe Anything Anywhere Anytime” — creates a long-term spatiotemporal memory that allows robots to store a…
MIT built a memory system that lets robots remember where you left your keys
Robots are still surprisingly bad at remembering where things are. You might recall that your keys were on the kitchen counter last night. A robot working beside you would struggle to connect that object and location in a useful way. MIT researchers built a system called DAAAM to fix that. DAAAM stands for Describe Anything, […] This story continues at The Next Web
With a long-term memory, robots can know where which objects are located. MIT has developed an approach to such a memory framework.

Coverage Details
Bias Distribution
- 67% of the sources lean Left
Factuality
To view factuality data please Upgrade to Premium




