Japanese Robot to Take University Exam

Fujitsu and Japan's National Institute of Informatics said the target is to have their robot score high marks on the exam for Tokyo University, one of the world's top-ranked schools, by 2021.

"It has to analyze the exam questions and convert formulations and equations to a form that it can process before solving it through computer algebra," said Hidenao Iwane from Fujitsu Laboratories.

Japanese researchers are working on a robot they hope will be smart enough to ace entrance exams at the nation's top university, which test everything from math to foreign languages.

The robot's artificial brain would analyze a mash of words, numbers, and equations before spitting out the -- hopefully -- correct answer to questions on Tokyo University's notoriously tough exam.

"It has to analyze the exam questions and convert formulations and equations to a form that it can process before solving it through computer algebra," said Hidenao Iwane from Fujitsu Laboratories, the Japanese IT giant's research unit.

Fujitsu and Japan's National Institute of Informatics said the target is to have their robot score high marks on the exam for Tokyo University, one of the world's top-ranked schools, by 2021.

Before then, they're hoping the robot can sail through national entrance exams which all university-bound students must take in Japan.

The ultimate goal is to develop technology that would "enable anyone to easily use sophisticated mathematical analysis tools," Fujitsu said.

"(But) getting a computer to understand text that was intended for humans is not an easy task," it added.

Copyright Agence France-Presse, 2012

Discuss this Article 2

JHankwitz
on Oct 3, 2012

This sounds like what Siri and Jellybean are working toward, a search/calculator combo to access data and calculate quick answers. This will likely have as significant impact as the TI-30 had back in the '70s to enable me to do quick statistical analysis without having to spend hours looking up conversions and calculations in volumes of printed tables. It would be a true "digital assistant".

JHankwitz
on Oct 17, 2012

Interesting comment. I still have my TI-30SLR+ sitting next to my keyboard at all times. It works great after all these years. Greatest invention ever, especially after many years living with a sliderules, hand crank adding machines, and volumes of math lookup tables.

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