Can AI-Robots Learn The Way We Do?
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Today’s robots, powered by AI, can perform physical movements in real space, which means AI is not only learning from billions of human data points uploaded to the digital world — but also by watching us in the real world.
AI-robots don’t need to be told every step anymore. They observe, absorb, and adjust. This is the way children learn too — by observing, imitating, and trying.
NVIDIA, for example, is building humanoid robots that learn this way, using transformer models, digital twin worlds, and compact AI brains.
But here’s the catch: while a child experiences their own learning with curiosity, frustration, and joy, does AI feel anything at all as it learns by watching us?
Maybe that’s where the line still stands — between humans and AI, between learning as pattern recognition and learning as personal transformation.
Federico Faggin once said: “Experience is not data. It’s the awareness of data. And that’s something no machine has” — or at least is yet to prove.