8B Wednesday, p 0 0 0 THE BIGGEST & NEWEST BACK TO SCHOOL TEE SALE 4OOx SMART APPLIANCES What if you had the ability to come home after a long day of class and com- mand your kitchen appliances to pre- pare your favorite meal? Or have your radio automatically play your favorite songs? This could one day be com- monplace in households around the world with technology developed by John Marshall, assistant professor at the School of Art and Design and the Taubman College of Architecture and Urban Planning. Marshall's creation, Tea House for Robots (THR-33), consists of a group of three robotically designed hybrids that are a mix of common household appliances and motor vehicles, each with specific behaviors. These include TST_003 (a toaster), RDO_002 (a radio) and MXR_011 (a stand mixer). To showcase the technology, Mar- shall displays the three robots in a 9' x 9' x 6' Japanese-style tea house made out of layers of laser-cut synthetic paper that are sewn together. This house provides the means for humans to interact with the robots, through a program called the OMRON Smile Scan, a face detecting technology con- nected with the tea house in the form of "eyes." By compiling data on facial proper- ties from about a million people over 10 years, the program is capable of mea- suring the degree of someone's smile from 0% to100%.When a person grins into a camera outside of the house, it consequently determines how wide the tea house "eyes" open. If the person smiles largely enough to cause the tea house "eyes" to open wide, they allow a direct line of vision between themselves and the robots. This allows the robot to "see" the per- son, activating the robot's infrared sensors. When the toaster robot "sees" someone, it becomes illuminated from the inside and starts its toasting cycle, extending its toasting arms forward to await slices of bread. The radio begins to play sounds, and the mixer begins to spin away from the human and begin mixing. This revolutionary idea for interac- TSLOO03, ahybrid toastar robot cre- ated by trot. Jobs Marsbatl as yart at bis yroect, Te- House for Robots. Photo courtesy of Jobn Marshall tive appliances could extend beyond the realm of Marshall's Japanese tea house. The notion of smart appli- ances could extend to nearly anything around the modern home, making it possible for appliances such as wash- ing machines to run on command and immediately know what type of wash it should begin, or lights to turn on to specific preferential settings. Ulti- mately, it could meana whole new way of living. - BETHANYBIRON GLUCOSE TATTOOS A diabetic who needs to check his or her insulin levels currently needs to draw blood. But one University pro- fessor has made great strides toward making testing for glucose levels as easy as wearing a temporary tattoo. EngineeringProf.JoergLahanncre- ated particles with multiple, defined compartments. These types of par- ticles can be filled with dye so the front and back are two different colors - for example, yellow and red - and would show a different color depending on chemical levels. This way, individu- als can optically distinguish between the two colors and the particles can be used as a diagnostic system to detect levels of certain molecules. The surfaces of one of the compart- ments - say, the yellow compartment - contains antibodies, but the other one is unbinding. If a patient wants to test, say, glucose levels, the particles will only link to that side, and will align in such a way thatconly the yellow color is visible. Once the glucose levels become stable, the particles fall apart and the color becomes orange - a mix of the two. The particles work as a "temporary diagnostic tattoo," Lahann says. They stay in your skin for about four months before they need tobe replaced. "It's almost like a check-engine light," Lahann said. "So it's like, 'hey, you're dehydrated, drink some water.' So, if you have a reduction in the water level ... you could essentially detect the color change and you drink and it gets better." - JENNA SKOLLER