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      This Robot Chef can ‘Taste’ Food as It Cooks same as Human to Determine if It Is Properly Cooked

      The robot “chef” is being train by Cambridge University researchers to taste food and determine if it is adequately cook while cooking it just like a human. This robot is being train to even develop the ability to alter the flavour of the food, base on the preferences of the user.

      So, does this mean that the human chef is on the verge of extinction as machines mimic the work they do, and, possibly, even become superior cooks?

      The robot chef was design by Cambridge University researchers to taste a sample plate of scramble eggs and tomatoes at various stages of chewing and grade the flavour.

      At three separate stages of the chewing process, the robot chef taste nine different varieties of scramble eggs and tomatoes, producing “taste maps” of the dishes.

      The findings may aid the development of automate meal preparation by robots, by helping them learn what tastes good.

      The findings were publish in the journal Frontiers in Robotics & AI.

      Researchers say that by mimicking human chewing and tasting processes, robots may someday be able to manufacture food that people will appreciate and that can be modified to suit individual preferences.

      Grzegorz Sochacki from Cambridge’s Department of Engineering, the paper’s first author, said that most home cooks are familiar with the concept of “tasting as you go”, which involves checking a dish’s flavour balance while cooking.

      Grzegorz Sochacki said that it’s crucial for robots to be able to taste what they’re cooking if they’re to be utilised for certain aspects of food preparation.

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      The researchers discover that this “taste as you go” approach considerably increase the robot’s capacity to judge the saltiness of the dish more rapidly and precisely than other electronic tasting technologies that only test a single homogenise sample.

      Dr Arsen Abdulali, also from the Department of Engineering and co-author of the paper, said that the act of chewing delivers continual feedback to the brain while people taste the food.

      Abdulali add that they intend to mimic a more realistic chewing and tasting process in a robotic system, which should result in a tastier end product.

      Readings from a conductance probe at various stages during chewing yield taste maps for each dish.

      The researchers attach a conductance probe, which works as a salinity sensor, to a robot arm to mimic the human process of chewing and tasting in their robot chef.

      They made scramble eggs and tomatoes with different amounts of tomatoes and salt in each dish.

      The robot taste the dishes in a grid-like pattern using the conductance probe, producing a reading in just a few seconds.

      To simulate the textural change cause by chewing, the scientists blend the egg mixture and had the robot test the plate once again.

      Taste maps of each dish were create using different readings at different points of chewing.

      Their findings reveale that robots were far better at assessing saltiness than other electronic tasting methods, which are generally time-consuming and only deliver a single reading.

      The researchers hope to improve the robot chef in the future so that it can taste a variety of foods and improve sensory capabilities to detect sweet or greasy foods.

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