Japan unveils always-willing dental patient - robot that flinches
TOKYO: Few people would want to be guinea pigs for aspiring dentists but Japan has found an always-willing patient — a robot.
Doctors and robotics researchers today unveiled a
humanoid that happily goes under the drill for orthodontics
students and can also express pain, roll her eyes and even drool like a real patient.
“Hello,” female-looking “Hanako” said cheerfully as an aspiring dentist closed in during a presentation in Tokyo. “Please take care of me.” But the robo-patient’s mood can quickly take a real-life turn for the worse if the grinding and drilling get too much or the wrong spot is hit.
“It hurts,” said Hanako, dangerously moving her plastic head while a dental student was
grinding her resin teeth, which are designed to be taken out and
examined later to assess the
student’s skill.
In the demonstration, under
the watchful gaze of an instructor, the dental student reacted quickly, deactivating and moving the sharp-pointed grinding tool to avoid damaging Hanoko’s teeth or gums. “Please raise your left hand when it hurts because it’s dangerous to move your mouth,” the student told the machine lying in the dentist’s chair.
To add to the realism, Hanako can also move her eyes and eyelids, jaw and tongue. She even discharges a saliva-like liquid and slowly slackens her jaw muscles to simulate the gradual “fatigue” of a real patient.
Hanako was developed by the medical Showa University and a research team led by humanoid pioneer Atsuo Takanishi, a professor at Waseda University, both Tokyo-based, as well as robot maker tmsuk based in southern Japan. The price tag is confidential, the inventors said.
Japan already has humanoid robots for a variety of tasks, from receptionists to photo models,
but the field of patient robots is still small. Hanako is the world’s first that has been used to
evaluate the skills of dental students on a large scale, according to Showa University. This month 88 of its students trained and took clinical exams using her.
Koutaro Maki, vice director of the Showa University Dental Hospital, told a press conference that the use of the humanoid meant a vast improvement from the traditional method to teach and train young dentists.