Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
Wallpaper
Wallpaper
Lifestyle
Jonathan Bell

Dogs in space: this friendly canine AI is designed to comfort lonely astronauts

Laika, the robotic dog for space exploration, by Jihee Kim.

The loneliness of the endurance space mission was the problem in hand for Hongik University design student Jihee Kim, under tutor Tate Eunyoung Kim. How can space agencies ensure astronauts have some kind of companion on voyages that might last for years, not months? 

Laika, the robotic dog for space travellers

(Image credit: Jihee Kim)

Her conceptual solution is to harness the enduring relationship between humans and dogs through a sophisticated AI robotic pet dubbed Laika. A blend of the cuddly kawaii stylings of Sony’s original Aibo (launched in 1998) and the sophisticated but sinister mechanics of Boston Dynamic’s Spot, Laika is designed for comfort and companionship. 

(Image credit: Jihee Kim)

Kim’s creation is amiable and attractive, the product of the Hollywood entertainment complex rather than the military-industrial one. Motions and reactions are all modelled on flesh and blood hounds, but the industrial design in unashamedly robotic – there’ll be no walkies in the uncanny valley. 

(Image credit: Jihee Kim)

As well as the all-important emotional engagement, this four-legged friend is also a mobile monitoring station, checking in on vital health stats as well as the on-board systems. Depth cameras, thermal imagining cameras and Simultaneous Localization and Mapping cameras (SLAM) help Laika get about on its graceful titanium limbs, whilst well-laced electrocardiography sensors are located on petting points on the back and neck, allowing the robot to seamlessly check on vital stats. 

(Image credit: Jihee Kim)

Granted, naming the pet after the pioneering yet perished Soviet space dog from 1957 might give even the dimmest AI pause for thought, but the intention is a serious one: an astronaut needs unstinting and trusting company for a mission that might last years.

(Image credit: Jihee Kim)

Robotics has developed in literal leaps and bounds in recent years. A dog feels like a logical animal for a robot to imitate and the introduction of Spot in 2016 marked the point at which military-funded hardware dovetailed with industrial needs, and the spooky-limbed quadruped is now an established means of remote monitoring and patrolling large sites. 

(Image credit: Jihee Kim)

Laika sets out to fuse faithful service with practical assistance, and just a hint of steely strength. She could well be the shape of things to come. 

Laika, by Jihee Kim, Hongkik University, Seoul, Behance Portfolio

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.