Tech Xplore on MSN
Adaptive motion system helps robots achieve human-like dexterity with minimal data
Despite rapid robotic automation advancements, most systems struggle to adapt their pre-trained movements to dynamic ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
New self-healing artificial 'pain nerves' could give humanoid robots human-like reflexes
Researchers from China’s Northeast Normal University have developed a novel soft, jelly-like electronic “pain nerve” that ...
A gelatin memristor with 16 stable conductance states mimics biological pain perception, rating intensity, sensitizing after ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
New adaptive system lets robots replicate human touch with far less training data
Japanese researchers develop an adaptive robot motion system that enables human-like grasping using minimal training data.
Human skin transmits sensory information as electrical pulses, or spikes, that encode signals related to pressure and pain. NRE-skin mimics this biological process by converting pressure ...
Robot skin that senses touch and pain — and triggers instant reflexes — makes robots more like humans. It probably also makes ...
Apple TV’s new science fiction comedy, Murderbot, introduces audiences to fascinating hybrid mechanisms, including the SecUnit Robots and the Combat Bots. Known as Constructs, these bots are a blend ...
What sets this approach apart is the training method. Instead of painstakingly programming each movement, the robot learned by watching hundreds of videos recorded from wrist-mounted cameras on da ...
ZME Science on MSN
World’s smallest programmable robot fits on a fingerprint ridge and carries its own computer
For nearly half a century, the dream of microscopic robotics has felt tantalizingly close, yet perpetually out of reach. We ...
Image courtesy by QUE.com In the evolving realm of medical science, the rise of tiny autonomous robots is nothing short of ...
Teddy Warner, 19, has always been interested in robotics. His family was in the industry, and he says he “grew up” working in a machinist shop while in high school. Now Warner is building a robotics ...
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