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June 5, 2008 9:58 AM PDT

NASA spawns smart twin in 'Second Life'

by Stefanie Olsen

First it started tweeting, then it bore a twin.

NASA is trying all manner of Web 2.0 software to promote its science to the tech-savvy crowd. Months ago, the media director at the space agency's Jet Propulsion Lab began sending out Twitter messages, or 140-character digital notes, about the Phoenix Lander mission to Mars. Now, NASA has created a so-called cybertwin for the Phoenix rover in the virtual world Second Life.

Even though the term "cybertwin" sounds very Web 1.0, the technology is based on techniques in artificial intelligence, such as natural language processing. Instead of tapping NASA's media director for answers, the Phoenix cybertwin calls on a database of knowledge that's been programmed by scientists from JPL. That way, people can ask questions of the Phoenix chat bot to receive quasi-personalized responses about the rover's mission. (The cybertwin was developed by Australia-based start-up MyCyberTwin.)

As you might expect, the cybertwin comes off like a robot.

Q: What is your purpose?
[16:21] Phoenix: I'll be using instruments to probe the northern polar site's soil and ice and I'm here with three main objectives: to study the history of water on Mars, to determine if the Martian arctic soil could support life, and to study the Martian weather.

Q: What is your schedule?
[16:21] Phoenix: I have some pre-programmed commands but mostly I will wait for commands from Earth that arrive in the Martian morning and send my results back in the afternoon. So far I have had commands including the deployment of my robotic arm.

It's hard to gauge whether the Second Life bot will resonate with the virtual community, considering that NASA Web 2.0 promotions can be a mixed bag. So far, the Twitter page has drawn thousands of followers, but Facebook is another story. The Phoenix Lander page on Facebook has only 16 fans. Turns out, social networks can be a lonely place, just like in space.

You can find the Phoenix cybertwin on the NASA Island in Second Life via this address.

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Add a Comment (Log in or register) (7 Comments)
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by Kev Orng June 5, 2008 10:27 AM PDT
What happens when you ask it questions unrelated to the mission?
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by stefanvolos June 5, 2008 10:32 AM PDT
Is the Phoenix bot equipped with Xcite?
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by DerekLerner June 5, 2008 11:11 AM PDT
also check out "Eddie," the four-year-old AI avatar http://www.virtualworldsnews.com/2008/03/rpi-creating-ai.html
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by Tracy-MyCyberTwin June 5, 2008 3:22 PM PDT
In reply to non-mission related questions: CyberTwins usually come with an instant pre-trained AI brain, which you can get here: www.mycybertwin.com.
You simply pick a personality style, switch it on, and your CyberTwin will be able to answer tens of thousands of questions accurately. This makes them the fastest, smartest, most inexpensive chat robots available. But for Phoenix, NASA decided sounding more robotic would be cool, becaue it is a a robot, so we turned off the pre-trained personality, to make Phoenix CyberTwin very mission focused.
The company website contains more information: http://mycybertwin.com/company/
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by masonlucas June 5, 2008 10:27 PM PDT
Hi...
Just wanted to add that the JPL Facebook site (Jet Propulsion Laboratory at NASA) actually has over 1,300 members.
I think the Phoenix Lander Facebook site you've referenced is possibly unofficial since the JPL site has all the up to date links and information on it.
Thanks
Mase
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by searl2112 June 10, 2008 12:40 AM PDT
You ALL STUPID???? NASA SAID THE ATMOSPHERE WAS 8.5 mbar...ROFL DO YOU ALL THINK A CHUTE WOULD WORK IN NEAR VACUUM??? lol the atmosphere is 824.7 mbar
ANYONE EVER THINK TO ASK WHAT THE OFFICAL READINGS FOR MARS ATMOSPHERE IS? OR ARE YOU ALL GOING TO SIT THERE AND THINK YOU KNOW THE ANSWER?
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by benjaminstraight July 28, 2008 3:45 AM PDT
Pretty cool
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