A caregiving robot that responds to spoken instructions while performing physical tasks may make robots easier to use and understand.
A tear in an ultra-fine blood vessel, just 100 microns wide — one tenth of a millimetre — must be meticulously repaired to restore blood flow to transplanted tissue taken from another part of the body ...
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.
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 ...
Tech Xplore on MSN
Robot learns to lip sync by watching YouTube
Almost half of our attention during face-to-face conversation focuses on lip motion. Yet, robots still struggle to move their ...
Hyundai-owned Boston Dynamics is also partnering with former owner Google's DeepMind on AI, in a full-circle moment for the ...
Human-inspired robots, aptly called humanoids, have emerged as the tech industry’s big bet on what comes next. They stand ...
For a Summer Undergraduate Research Fellowship project, Carnegie Mellon University sophomore Jasmine Li worked with robotic arms in the Robotic Caregiving and Human Interaction Lab to analyze the ...
ZME Science on MSN
World’s Smallest Programmable Robot Fits on a Fingerprint Ridge and Carries Its Own Computer
Measuring just 200 by 300 by 50 micrometers — smaller than a grain of salt and roughly the size of a single-celled paramecium ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
Video: China’s humanoid robot masters complex skills in hours without prior setup
PNDbotics unveils Adam-U Ultra, a humanoid robot with VLA AI and 10,000+ data samples, learning new skills in hours.
Hosted on MSN
The robots that could replace human labor
This video explores the next generation of robots poised to enter everyday life. From humanoid assistants and powered exoskeletons to robotic bees and pollution-hunting machines, these systems promise ...
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