Robot guide leads visitors in a Greek cave
Persephone is a tour guide in Greece, but perhaps not the type people are used to.
Billed as the world's first robot tour guide inside a cave, Persephone has been welcoming visitors since mid-July to the Alistrati Cave in northern Greece.
The multilingual robot covers the first 150 meters of the part of the cave that is open to the public. In the remaining 750 meters, a human guide takes over.
The robot was named Persephone because, according to one version of the ancient Greek myth, it was in a nearby plain that Pluto, the god of the underworld who was also known as Hades, abducted Persephone, with the consent of her father Zeus, to take her as his wife.
The robot can give its part of the tour in 33 languages and interact at a basic level with visitors in three languages. It can also answer 33 questions, but only in Greek.
Nikos Kartalis, the scientific director for the Alistrati site, had the idea of creating the robot when he saw one on TV guiding visitors at an art gallery.
Seventeen years later, "we got our funds and the robot guide became a reality," Kartalis said.
The robot was built by the National Technology and Research Foundation and cost 118,000 euros.
"We already have a 70 percent increase in visitors compared to last year since we started using" the robot, said Kartalis.
"People are enthusiastic, especially the children, and people who had visited in the past are coming back to see the robot guide," he noted.
"It is something unprecedented for them, to have the ability to interact with their robot by asking it questions and the robot answering them," he said.
The robot moves along a walkway, passing through an ornate landscape of...
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