stratego
Trying to be good.
What kind of jobs can you get with a psychology and a mechanical engineering degree? I don't really want to build a robot that can analyze why I built the robot. Any suggestions?


or oh yeah apartment kitchens too I guess. Plot the little people doing their triangles refrigerator to sink to stove and back, opening and closing the same cupboard in the same manner for the same item day in and day out. I'd aim for specifics, like patenting a magnetic drawer stop that makes a pleasant small thunk when closed, and other details on this scale. I trust you notice and get excited about little mechanical-psychological details like that.Originally posted by Mojotronica
Robotic AI -- designing robots that act like insects, for example.
Useful if you need a robot that is basically under human control, but able to make local level decisions that serve it's primary mission.
What sort of psychology degree?
Originally posted by stratego
I'm not sure yet, I'm only a sophomore and had been pursuing those two degrees. I'm think maybe towards criminal psychology or military propaganda.
Originally posted by Colonel Kraken
I would imagine you would make an excellent consultant for companies and design teams.
to make the design teams, the machinists, and the marketing department all work harmoniously. If you can do that, you're positively brilliant.Interesting, but I slightly disagree. Nature and robots (or other electronically controlled mechanical devices) share a common problem: Lightweight. A mechanical control device may only pay off if it doesn't add weight. The second point is reliability, an electronic system wears down slower than a mechanical one. That's why system decomposition usually leads to almost all funcionality being realized by software.Originally posted by Ayatollah So
It is true that as currently practiced (well, last time I looked - maybe it has changed), it is all about software. But animals rely heavily on mechanical governance systems, making less work for the brain, and roboticists would do well to imitate nature. With the right balances of elasticity and momentum, a legged robot can be made to walk with no electric control at all (given a slope, or a push). Alternatively, a robot can be constructed so that the CPU directly controls everything (lift leg#1 5 degrees at the hip joint; rotate leg #4 9 degrees forward; etc.). The latter approach is a waste of programmers' time.
Originally posted by Phantom Lord
Nature and robots (or other electronically controlled mechanical devices) share a common problem: Lightweight. A mechanical control device may only pay off if it doesn't add weight. The second point is reliability, an electronic system wears down slower than a mechanical one.