Boston Dynamics upgraded the Atlas robot
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Robot skin can feel touch and pain, and that changes everything
Robots are starting to flinch. New generations of electronic skin can register heat, pressure and even damaging force, then trigger lightning-fast reflexes that look less like code and more like instinct.
Phantom Neuro is developing a muscle-machine interface that allows individuals – particularly those with limb loss or motor impairments – to intuitively control advanced robotic systems like prosthetics and exoskeletons using the natural electrical ...
Most robots rely on rigid, bulky parts that limit their adaptability, strength, and safety in real-world environments. Researchers developed soft, battery-powered artificial muscles inspired by human anatomy that can stretch, lift heavy objects, and sense ...
Image courtesy by QUE.com Artificial Intelligence (AI) has made substantial strides in recent years, with one of its most fascinating
In the picture an individual with a limb deficiency wears the system during familiarization. The researchers designed a soft prosthetic hand with two degrees of actuation, enabling it to perform postures driven by two primary postural synergies. This ...
Arabian Post on MSN
Artificial skin brings reflex-like sensing to robots
Researchers at the City University of Hong Kong have developed an artificial skin that mimics key functions of the human nervous system, marking a step towards robots that can feel touch, detect injury and react instinctively to harmful contact.
An appliance company based in China has developed a six-armed, wheeled “super humanoid” robot for the factory line. The MIRO U from Midea Group, features a humanoid head and a torso that aligns with human-height workstations and includes six fully actuated bionic limbs capable of performing three tasks at once.