Gaka-Chu: A Self-Employed Autonomous Robot Artist

The physical autonomy of robots is well understood both theoretically and practically. By contrast, there is almost no research exploring their potential economic autonomy. In this paper, we present the first economically autonomous robot — a robot able to produce marketable goods while having full control over the use of its generated income. Gaka-chu (“painter” in Japanese) is a 6-axis robot arm that creates paintings of Japanese characters from an autoselected keyword. By using a blockchain-based smart contract, Gaka-chu can autonomously list a painting it made for sale in an online auction. In this transaction, the robot interacts with the human bidders as a peer not as a tool. Using the blockchain-based smart contract, Gaka-chu can then use its income from selling paintings to replenish its resources by autonomously ordering materials from an online art shop. We built the Gaka-chu prototype with an Ethereum-based smart contract and ran a 6-month long experiment, during which the robot created and sold four paintings, simultaneously using its income to purchase supplies and repay initial investors. In this work, we present the results of the experiments conducted and discuss the implications of economically autonomous robots.

Citation

Castelló Ferrer, E., Berman, I., Kapitonov, A., Manaenko, V., Chernyaev, M., & Tarasov, P. (2023). "Gaka-chu: a self-employed autonomous robot artist". Proceedings of the IEEE International Conference on Robotics and Automation (ICRA), 11583-11589.

Authors from IE Research Datalab