Westlake Robotics has unveiled a new humanoid robot called Titan o1 that is powered by a proprietary artificial intelligence system designed to replicate human movements in real time.
The Hangzhou-based company presented the robot during a demonstration in which an operator wearing a motion-capture suit performed a series of movements that the humanoid mirrored almost instantly. The robot reproduced the operator’s gestures with close synchronization, from arm swings and torso rotations to coordinated kicks.
The system is driven by Westlake Robotics’ internally developed General Action Expert model, known as GAE, which the company describes as a foundation model for physical actions.
The development reflects a broader trend in robotics toward building general-purpose AI systems capable of controlling machines across a wide range of tasks rather than relying on narrowly programmed motion routines.
A Foundation Model for Robot Motion
Titan o1’s capabilities are built around the GAE model, which processes signals from human operators and translates them into coordinated robotic motion.
During the demonstration, the robot reproduced complex physical actions within milliseconds of the operator performing them. According to the company, the system can adapt to different operators and motion styles without requiring task-specific programming.
Researchers involved in the project describe the model as functioning similarly to a cerebellum in the human body. In biological systems, the cerebellum plays a central role in coordinating movement, maintaining balance and ensuring fluid motion.
The GAE model is intended to provide a comparable function for robots, allowing them to interpret signals and generate appropriate physical responses even when encountering movements they have not previously executed.
Toward Scalable Humanoid Control
One of the key design goals of the system is scalability across different robotic platforms.
Westlake Robotics says the GAE model is designed with “cross-embodiment” capability, meaning the same AI model can potentially control robots with different structures or sizes. That approach could allow the same intelligence layer to operate across fleets of machines.
The company also demonstrated how a single operator could control multiple robots performing identical tasks simultaneously. Such a capability could be useful in industrial or service settings where coordinated groups of robots are required.
China’s Growing Focus on Embodied AI
The launch of Titan o1 comes as China accelerates development of humanoid robotics and embodied artificial intelligence.
Chinese companies have increasingly focused on integrating large-scale AI models with robotics hardware, an approach similar to efforts underway in the United States and Europe to combine foundation models with physical machines.
In these systems, the goal is not only to recognize objects or generate language but also to translate AI reasoning into coordinated physical actions.
For robotics developers, the challenge is to create AI models capable of understanding and generating movement in the same way large language models process text.
Whether approaches like Westlake Robotics’ General Action Expert can scale beyond demonstrations remains to be seen. But the company’s unveiling highlights how the global race to build intelligent humanoid machines is increasingly centered on software architectures that bridge AI reasoning and physical motion.