Innovative Techs on MSN
Robots Learn to Feel: How Next-Gen Tactile Sensing Is Revolutionizing Humanoid Touch!
Discover the latest breakthroughs in robotic tactile sensing and how they are transforming the capabilities of humanoid ...
Modern Engineering Marvels on MSN
Inside Atlas’s uncanny stand-up: Sensors, safety, and engineering precision
Why would one of the most sophisticated humanoid robots in the world want to get up from the floor in a way no human ever would? The answer lies deep in the interaction between sensor limitations, ...
TOKYO, Dec. 3, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- XELA Robotics (www.xelarobotics.com), a specialist in advanced 3D tactile sensor technology, has successfully integrated its uSkin (R) sensors into a Tesollo DG-5F ...
A new meta-learning framework inspired by how babies explore the world could help robots adapt faster, handle objects safely, ...
(Yicai) Dec. 3 -- Startups developing sensors for robots are attracting venture capital to enhance product performance and ...
PaXini's dexterous-hand series delivers human-finger-level flexibility and fine manipulation, enabling skillful grasping of objects such as test tubes, spheres, and cubes--demonstrating highly ...
ETRI researchers have successfully developed a robotic finger capable of precisely detecting omnidirectional pressure. The development of intelligent robotic hand technology, which can adjust its grip ...
VANCOUVER, British Columbia--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Today Sanctuary AI, a company developing physical AI for general purpose robots, announced the integration of new tactile sensor technology into its ...
Tech Xplore on MSN
Can robots achieve human-level competence without a sense of touch? Experts weigh in
One approach my group is exploring is giving robots a degree of “local intelligence” in their sensorised bodies. Humans ...
Tech Xplore on MSN
Infant-inspired framework helps robots learn to interact with objects
Over the past decades, roboticists have introduced a wide range of advanced systems that can move around in their ...
Fork in hand, a robot arm skewers a strawberry from above and delivers it to Tyler Schrenk’s mouth. Sitting in his wheelchair, Schrenk nudges his neck forward to take a bite. Next, the arm goes for a ...
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