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Meet the robotic 'finger' ready to check your pulse

Researchers at the University of Science and Technology of China have developed a soft robotic "finger" with a sophisticated sense of touch that can perform routine doctor's office examinations, including taking a patient's ...

Q&A: Teaching robots to touch and interact like humans

Robots are widely used in the automotive industry and have started entering new application domains such as logistics in the last few years. However, current robots still face many limitations. They typically perform a single ...

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Robotics
Google DeepMind unveils two new AI-based robot hand systems—ALOHA Unleashed and DemoStart
Robotics
Computational approach could continually teach robots new skills via dialogue
Robotics
Team develops versatile knee exoskeletons for safer lifting
Robotics
Combining soft artificial muscles with a rigid, magnetic exoskeleton to create building blocks for versatile robots
Robotics
Task planning framework supports human-robot collaborative furniture assembly
Robotics
Magnetically driven soft robot achieves high-speed jumping
Robotics
Combining existing sensors with machine learning algorithms improves robots' intrinsic sense of touch
Robotics
Stretching the possibilities of soft robots with flexible electronics
Robotics
Teaching robots to use color in moving objects
Robotics
Algorithm takes robots a step closer to being able to 'act on intuition'
Robotics
Versatile microscale robots can fold into 3D shapes and crawl
Robotics
Multimodal ultra-thin soft robots can explore narrow spaces for inspection and maintenance
Robotics
Robot leg powered by artificial muscles outperforms conventional designs
Robotics
Will humans accept robots that can lie? Scientists find it depends on the lie
Business
UK research suggests that lighting, music, national flags could help customers find service robots more acceptable
Robotics
Robot waiters in Kenya create a buzz. But there are concerns about what it means for human labor
Robotics
AI technology and self-coordinating drones to detect and investigate wildfires
Robotics
Robots are coming to the kitchen—what that could mean for society and culture
Robotics
VoicePilot framework enhances communication between humans and physically assistive robots
Robotics
How drone attacks are changing the rules and the costs of the Ukraine war

Other news

Planetary Sciences
'Killer electrons': Lightning storms play cosmic pinball with space weather
Quantum Physics
Google's sycamore quantum chip beats classical computers running random circuit sampling
Optics & Photonics
Researchers develop a laser that produces the strongest ultra-short laser pulses to date
Earth Sciences
Ancient climate analysis reveals unknown global processes
Other
Saturday Citations: All that sparkles is plastic; woke tree diversity; the gravitational basin in which we reside
Ecology
AI empowers iNaturalist to map California plants with unprecedented precision
Ecology
Full moon hazard: 50% rise in wildlife vehicle collisions during moonlit nights
Evolution
Evolution in real time: Scientists predict—and witness—evolution in a 30-year marine snail experiment
Ecology
Hidden in the teeth: DNA study finds these 19th century lions preyed on humans and giraffes
Condensed Matter
Physicists reveal nonlinear transport induced by quantum geometry in planar altermagnets
Plants & Animals
One-third of European plant species could be in trouble due to declining seed disperser populations
Plants & Animals
Bat data study reveals conservation priorities in San Diego County
Social Sciences
Analysis of approximately 75 million publications finds those employing AI are more likely to be a 'hit paper'
Astrobiology
How did the building blocks of life arrive on Earth? Zinc fingerprints in meteorites offer clues
General Physics
Study proposes that proteins can compartmentalize and form droplets inside cells
Nanophysics
Engineering perovskite materials at the atomic level paves way for new lasers, LEDs
Molecular & Computational biology
Targeting 'undruggable' diseases: Researchers reveal new levels of detail in targeted protein degradation
Plasma Physics
Researchers uncover role of plasma waves in mysterious heating of sun's corona
Plants & Animals
Gazing at your dog can connect your brains, research suggests
Other
New study reveals key players in global transshipment, boosting seafood transparency

Researchers build a soft robot with neurologic capabilities

In work that combines a deep understanding of the biology of soft-bodied animals such as earthworms with advances in materials and electronic technologies, researchers from the United States and China have developed a robotic ...

These new soft actuators could make soft robots less bulky

Engineers at the University of California San Diego have developed a way to build soft robots that are compact, portable and multifunctional. The advance was made possible by creating soft, tubular actuators whose movements ...

Biologically-inspired skin improves robots' sensory abilities

Sensitive synthetic skin enables robots to sense their own bodies and surroundings—a crucial capability if they are to be in close contact with people. Inspired by human skin, a team at the Technical University of Munich ...

5G wireless to connect robots on the ground to AI in the cloud

A research team at the NYU Tandon School of Engineering, with the support of the National Science Foundation's National Robotics Initiative 2.0, is building the foundations of a wireless system that takes advantage of superfast ...

Start-up unveils robot with human-like dexterous grip

A robotics technology start-up from Nanyang Technological University, Singapore (NTU Singapore) named Eureka Robotics, has unveiled a new robot that can pick up delicate optical lenses and mirrors with care and precision, ...

Deep-learning method to design fly-like robots

"Just think about what a fly can do," says Professor Pavan Ramdya, whose lab at EPFL's Brain Mind Institute, with the lab of Professor Pascal Fua in EPFL's Institute for Computer Science, led the study. "A fly can climb across ...

Soft robot programmed to move like an inchworm

Engineering researchers from the University of Toronto have created a miniature robot that can crawl with inchworm-like motion. The underlying technology could one day transform industries from aviation to smart wearables.