Last update:

Three-armed robot conducts German orchestra

A three-armed robot trained to mimic a human orchestra conductor has made its debut in the German city of Dresden, directing music composed specially to complement the device's skills.

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 ...

More news

Robotics
Neural Motion Planning approach helps robots navigate challenging obstacles in unfamiliar environments
Robotics
Q&A: Teaching robots to touch and interact like humans
Robotics
Google DeepMind unveils two new AI-based robot hand systems—ALOHA Unleashed and DemoStart
Robotics
Sky high—Europe's first drone cargo airline gets ready to take off
Robotics
The future of delivery with transformative drones for low-altitude economy
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

Other news

Analytical Chemistry
Light broadens the scope of alkene synthesis
Ecology
Study shows wild birds' health and likely survival is affected by the gut microbiome
Condensed Matter
New light-induced material shows powerful potential for quantum applications
Archaeology
Did child labor fuel the ancient pottery industry?
Earth Sciences
El Niño Southern Oscillation caused spike in 2023 temperatures, study finds
Plants & Animals
Bacteria discovered in healthy vertebrate brains point to a potential role in brain function
Social Sciences
How soccer could address prison re-offending
Cell & Microbiology
New bacteria-based therapy shows promise for fighting cancer
Astronomy
Astronomers detect very-high-energy gamma-ray emission surrounding distant pulsar
Archaeology
Cemetery study reveals how daily life changed from the Iron Age to the Roman period
Political science
Election delays impact voter trust but messages from election officials can help, survey finds
Quantum Physics
Dual-species atomic arrays show promise for quantum error correction
Evolution
Ancient hominins had humanlike hands, indicating earlier tool use, study reveals
Plants & Animals
Modern mass extinction in an Ecuadorean cloud forest found to be a mirage
Plants & Animals
Seven new frog species discovered in Madagascar
Plants & Animals
Rangers lead effort to monitor Uganda's lion population in critical stronghold
Ecology
New temperature conditions found in two thirds of key tropical forests
Planetary Sciences
Atmospheric oxidation and the creation of modern Mars
Evolution
Scientists discover one of the Earth's earliest animals in Australian outback
Quantum Physics
Study explores the physical origin of errors in a spin qubit processor

New robot hand is soft and strong

50 years ago, the first industrial robot arm called Unimate assembled a simple breakfast of toast, coffee, and champagne. While it might have looked like a seamless feat, every movement and placement was coded with careful ...

Researchers create nano-bot to probe inside human cells

University of Toronto Engineering researchers have built a set of magnetic 'tweezers' that can position a nano-scale bead inside a human cell in three dimensions with unprecedented precision. The nano-bot has already been ...

A robotic leg, born without prior knowledge, learns to walk

For a newborn giraffe or wildebeest, being born can be a perilous introduction to the world—predators lie in wait for an opportunity to make a meal of the herd's weakest member. This is why many species have evolved ways ...