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Robot dog determines how badly feet smell

News Desk (The Japan News/Asia News Network)
Kitakyushu, Japan
Tue, September 26, 2017

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Robot dog determines how badly feet smell Hana-chan has an odor-detection sensor in its nose. The robot reacts in three different ways according to the degree of a detected odor. I (Shutterstock/File)

Worried about having stinky feet? A robot dog named Hana-chan can sniff them and make the call.

The robot dog, developed by start-up Next Technology, LLC., can check for foot odor.

Next Technology is based at the National Institute of Technology, Kitakyushu College in Kitakyushu.

It aims to market the 15-centimeter-long stuffed robot next spring at a price tag of between ¥100,000 (US$896) and ¥200,000.

Read also: Face scans, robot baggage handlers - airports of the future

Hana-chan has an odor-detection sensor in its nose. The robot reacts in three different ways according to the degree of a detected odor. If the odor is weak, the robot nestles up to you; if the odor is moderate, the robot barks; and if the odor is strong, the robot faints.

The robot dog, developed by start-up Next Technology, LLC., can check for foot odor.
The robot dog, developed by start-up Next Technology, LLC., can check for foot odor. (The Japan News /File)

Next Technology set the level at which Hana-chan faints using socks that had been worn for two days straight. The company plans to add a deodorant-spraying function to the robot in the future.

Next Technology President Takashi Takimoto, who is also an associate professor at Kitakyushu College, and others visited the Kitakyushu city government office on Sept. 7 to introduce Hana-chan to Mayor Kenji Kitahashi.

Hana-chan sniffed the mayor’s feet and nestled up to him.

“It’s a great idea for interacting with robots in our daily lives,” Kitahashi said.


This article appeared on The Japan News newspaper website, which is a member of Asia News Network and a media partner of The Jakarta Post
 

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