By learning from human touch, robots can grip objects more safely and adapt to real-world conditions without massive training data.
Robots are becoming smarter and more common, but their ability to handle objects with human-like precision remains limited.
The cutting-edge technology equips these robots with the ability to "feel" and handle tasks with a sensitivity almost like human touch, enabling them to carry out complex picking and packing ...
Robots now see the world with an ease that once belonged only to science fiction. They can recognize objects, navigate cluttered spaces and sort thousands of parcels an hour. But ask a robot to touch ...
Microsoft introduces Rho-alpha, an AI that understands human commands and controls two-armed robots with near-human precision.
This week Amazon debuted a new warehouse robot that has a sense of "touch," but the company also promised its new bot will not replace human warehouse workers. On Monday, at Amazon's Delivering the ...
Robots now see the world with an ease that once belonged only to science fiction. They can recognize objects, navigate cluttered spaces, and sort thousands of parcels an hour. But ask a robot to touch ...
Data-Driven Decisions: The well-known “data-driven decisions” approach comes into play with alerts and hard data that make it ...
Robots excel at many things, but having a good sense of touch is not among them. Whether dropping items or pinching them too tightly, which crushes the object, many robots struggle with these basic ...
A new study suggests humans can sense hidden objects without touching them, by detecting faint movements in sand. This unexpected form of “remote touch” challenges traditional ideas about how the ...
Scientists have developed a low-cost, durable, highly-sensitive robotic ‘skin’ that can be added to robotic hands like a glove, enabling robots to detect information about their surroundings in a way ...