Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe wants to stage a "Robot Olympics" in 2020, the same year Tokyo hosts the Summer Games, local media reported Thursday.
Abe also revealed plans for a task force to develop Japan's robot industry and to triple the size of the market for the machines to 2.4 trillion yen ($24 billion).
"In 2020 I would like to gather all of the world's robots and aim to hold an Olympics where they compete in technical skills," Abe told reporters.
"We want to make robots a major pillar of our economic growth strategy," Abe was quoted as saying by Japan's Jiji Press agency.
Abe was speaking during a visit to production lines for industrial and care-giving robots in Saitama, north of Tokyo, and in the Japanese capital.
"We would like to set up a council on making a robotic revolution a reality in order to aid Japan's growth," he said.
Abe gave the thumbs up to a bed that transforms into a wheelchair, calling it "easy to use" after trying it out for himself.
(Also Read: Japanese Robotics Firm Showcases Thought-Controlled Suits)
Japan, one of the world leaders in robotics, recently unveiled a chatty humanoid robot that its makers say can understand people's emotions. They said claimed the robot, called EMIEW2, was capable of knowing when its jokes had fallen flat. The pint-sized roller-skating robot is able to have a short conversation with a human being, without being given a script.
The red and white robot picks key words from a sentence for example, "how many" to try to work out what question it is being asked, then confirms the inquiry before firing back an answer. Engineers at Hitachi have programmed the android to understand a range of human responses, including non-verbal signals like nods.
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