Category Archives: robot arms

Emotional Deficit

Robots Create Empathy In Humans 
But Fail To Work On Senators

Richieville News Service – WASHINGTON, D.C.
Researchers who are using a robot baby seal to help patients develop empathy and emotional attachments, reported today that surprisingly, the device does not work on U.S. Senators. The robot, called Paro, was originally developed in Japan where some people keep it as a pet, but therapists have been using it because of the mechanical seal’s ability to elicit feelings of compassion and love. Now scientists are saying they have been unable to achieve similar results when using the device on Capitol Hill.
“It’s really weird,” said Dr. Joy Rapport, one of the researchers who tested Paro on current members of Congress. “Usually after a minute or two with Paro, people start to feel sympathy, empathy and a whole range of feelings that show an emotional connection, but with Senators, we get nothing, zero, nada. I mean, Paro works on people with dementia, but with these politicians there’s no response at all. It’s like that part of their brains is missing.”

Dr. Rapport would not speculate on the effect this emotional deficit might have on Senate votes like the one that blocked extending unemployment benefits for the millions of Americans who are out of work and about to lose what meager income they still have. 

“We don’t yet know why they vote the way they do,” said Dr. Rapport. “It could be that they have some sort of unusual brain damage that makes it impossible to sympathize with a fellow human being, or it could be that they are just cold-blooded, cynical, political hacks who are intentionally wrecking the lives of their fellow Americans. We’re still investigating.”

Dr. Rapport did say there was at least one positive aspect to the Senators’ interaction with the robot baby seal. “I’ll give them this much, they may not have felt any sympathy for Paro, but at least they didn’t try to club it to death and sell its fur.”


For more Richieville humor, read the comic sci-fi novel, Rate Me Red.

Richieville Science News

Obesity Rates Level Off

Americans Hit Limit Of Corn Syrup Consumption

Americans may not be able to consume more corn syrup.

The leveling off of childhood obesity rates reported Wednesday was not caused by an increase in exercise or a change of eating habits by the nation’s young, say researchers. Instead, it is the result of an event unforeseen by scientists – Americans apparently just cannot digest any more high fructose corn syrup. 
“Have you seen more kids exercising?” asked Dr. Vivian Tanworthy, a scientist at the Center for Disease Control. “Because we sure haven’t. Unless looking at your friends’ profiles on Facebook or downloading songs in iTunes count as exercise. And by the way, if any kids are listening – they don’t!”
Although health officials originally hailed the news as a sign that public education programs about nutrition and healthy lifestyles were finally having an effect, the consensus now seems to be that something else is at work. Even though Americans are now consuming more than sixty pounds of the syrup per person annually, it seems there is a natural limit to the amount of mass-produced sweetener the human body can absorb.  
“We’re calling it the high fructose barrier,” explained Dr. Tanworthy. “The mechanism is rather technical, but it seems that by the time you get to your third sixty-four ounce bottle of Pepsi, that’s it, you just can’t metabolize any more of the stuff. 
Tanworthy said she doubted obesity levels would actually decline unless, as she put it, “someone turns off the Internet.” But the good news is that they will not continue to rise as they have for the past two decades. “That’s right,” she said. “It doesn’t matter what we eat now – Americans just can’t get any fatter.” 

Monkeys Use Brain To Control Robot Arm
83 Percent Vote For McCain

Monkeys prefer Senator McCain by a wide margin.

Scientists have been able to teach monkeys to control robot arms using only their brain waves, it was reported in the journal Nature. During one experiment, eighty-three percent of the monkeys used the robotic arms to vote for Republican John McCain.
Alvin Cephas of the University of Pittsburgh was in charge of the team who performed the experiments. “We’d been having them grab treats with the arms,” he explained in a phone interview. “Then someone, I think it was Bernie the grad student, had the idea of letting them vote on electronic voting machines.”
The remaining monkey vote was split between Libertarian Bob Barr and Representative Ron Paul.
“That’s right,” confirmed Mr. Cephas. “Who would have guessed that monkeys are all Republicans?  I guess they’re not as smart as we thought.”