Robot Cheerleading Squad Showcases Murata's Latest Sensor Technology

Advertisement
By Agence France-Presse | Updated: 25 September 2014 16:04 IST
A team of cheerleading robots made their dancing debut in Tokyo on Thursday as creator Murata Manufacturing demonstrated its cutting-edge sensor technology.

With curtains pulled back and Japanese pop music pulsing in the background, 10 doll-like robot girls with illuminated pom-poms rolled out onto a stage to perform their choreographed routine.

The cheerleaders stand just 36 centimetres (10 inches) tall with matching bob hairstyles that hide the complicated machinery inside their heads.

Advertisement

The team's advanced gyro sensors, which are usually found in cars and digital cameras, keep them from falling off the balls that they wobble on during their routine, Murata said.

The cute creations have LED eyes that shine in different colours as they manoeuvre into various formations including a heart shape, diagonal lines and a moving figure of eight.

Advertisement

"Of course they cannot jump like true cheerleaders," said Koichi Yoshikawa, a Murata engineer involved developing the technology.

"But the idea is that they are doing their best to stay stable on their little ball, as if they were telling the team, 'hang on, do your best'!"

Advertisement

Group-control technology, developed in collaboration with Kyoto University, makes sure that the robots move in a synchronised way and don't crash into each other.

That promise got off to a shaky start, however, as several dolls collided and fell over during the first take in front of assembled media prompting assistants to remove clumsy members of the squad.

Advertisement

Despite the hiccup, Murata, a major electronics manufacturer, said the technology has big potential, such as helping cars stabilise on slippery or damaged roads.

The company currently makes sensors that are used to monitor tyre pressure and in engine control units.

Its next-generation technology could also be used as an anti-collision device in self-driving cars being developed by companies such as Google and Tesla.

Also it "could be used in rescue robots that perform group tasks at disaster sites," said Yoshikawa.

While Murata is not planning to mass produce the cheerleaders, it's hoping they'll help draw kids into the engineering field, he said.

The pom-pom squad follows on from the firm's 'Murata Boy', a small child-like robot who rides a bicycle, first launched in 1991 and then updated in 2005, as well as unicycle-riding 'Murata Girl', released in 2008.

 

Get your daily dose of tech news, reviews, and insights, in under 80 characters on Gadgets 360 Turbo. Connect with fellow tech lovers on our Forum. Follow us on X, Facebook, WhatsApp, Threads and Google News for instant updates. Catch all the action on our YouTube channel.

Advertisement

Related Stories

Popular Mobile Brands
  1. Airtel's Priority Postpaid Becomes India's First 5G Network Slicing Service
  2. Moto G37, Moto G37 Power Launched in India With These Features
  3. Vivo S60 Launch Date Announced; Company Reveals Design and Key Details
  4. Google Takes the Anthropic Route With Weekly Usage Limits for Gemini
  5. Xiaomi 17T Series Retail Listing Reveals Pricing and Specifications
  1. Massive Solar Storm Reveals How Mars Is Losing Its Atmosphere
  2. Samsung Galaxy S27 Series Tipped to Include New Pro Model; Galaxy S27 Ultra Said to Offer Hardware Upgrades
  3. Redmi Turbo 5 India Launch Timeline Leaked, Tipped to Retain Same Features as Chinese Variant
  4. Airtel Introduces Priority Postpaid With India's First 5G Network Slicing Starting at Rs. 449
  5. Echo Protocol Exploit Sees Hacker Mint Unauthorised eBTC Worth $76.7 Million
  6. Xiaomi 17T Pro, Xiaomi 17T Price and Specifications Surface on Retail Listing Ahead of May 28 Launch
  7. Xiaomi 17 Max Reportedly Spotted on Geekbench Ahead of May 21 Launch
  8. Lanterns OTT Release Date Confirmed: When and Where to Watch DCU Green Lantern Series Online?
  9. iOS 27 Could Bring AI Wallpaper Generator, Smarter Siri, Revamped Shortcuts App to iPhone: Report
  10. Perplexity Users Claim Their Usage Limit Was Significantly Reduced, Company Reportedly Responds
Download Our Apps
Available in Hindi
© Copyright Red Pixels Ventures Limited 2026. All rights reserved.