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The system contains a sensor, chip and tiny AI model inspired by biological eyes and brains and uses a tenth of the energy of a camera-based system.
Scientists decode imagined finger movements into robotic control, marking a game-changing moment in noninvasive brain tech.
Robotic systems have the potential to greatly enhance daily living for the over one billion individuals worldwide who ...
Robotera’s new Q5 humanoid robot combines advanced dexterity, mobility, and AI interaction for real-world service across key ...
Before there was R2, however, there was Robonaut 1A, R2’s older sibling. Unlike R2, Robonaut 1A has no legs, but with its ...
ANYmal-D, the badminton-playing quadruped robot from ETH Zurich, combines artificial intelligence with whole-body ...
In the town of Brookwood, you’ll find Fat Boy’s Pizzeria. It’s a new pizza place that opened in April, and as of this week, it’s using a robot to help deliver food and drinks to the tables.
As part of Disneyland's 70th anniversary, the company will introduce an animatronic of Walt Disney. But his granddaughter ...
China's humanoid robots will not replace human workers and cause mass unemployment, according to a Chinese official who oversees a tech hub in Beijing, amid a rapid expansion of the sector and ...
Giving warehouse workers a hand Parness says Vulcan’s sense of touch is a breakthrough because it brings “physical intelligence” to robots, and that’s the categorical breakthrough here.
In this video, we explore the science and psychology behind humanoid robots, the uncanny valley effect, and the potential social and ethical implications of giving machines a human face.
The human hand is one of the most staggeringly sophisticated and physiologically intricate parts of the body. It has more than 30 muscles , 27 joints alongside a network of ligaments and tendons ...