Scientists create self-repairing robotic skin with pain detection and modular magnetic patches. The neuromorphic e-skin enables robots to sense harmful contact instantly.
Morning Overview on MSNOpinion
Rise of humanoid robots could secretly make humans fear each other more
Humanoid robots are moving rapidly from research labs into homes, hospitals, warehouses and care facilities, promising ...
Humans pay enormous attention to lips during conversation, and robots have struggled badly to keep up. A new robot developed ...
By learning from human touch, robots can grip objects more safely and adapt to real-world conditions without massive training ...
The Columbia University researchers achieved the feat by allowing their robot, EMO, to study itself in a mirror. It learned ...
Scientists have created a robot that learns lip movements by watching humans rather than following preset rules. The ...
The company’s new warehouse robot — Vulcan — represents a radical leap forward for robotics, where the hardware can “feel” what it’s touching. Amazon recently unveiled a new warehouse robot that can ...
Tech Xplore on MSN
Swarms of mini robots that 'bloom' could lead to adaptive architecture
Nature is, of course, the master engineer—been there, seen it, solved it. While we struggle to design buildings that don't ...
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