Scientists have developed a color-changing tactile sensor that lets robots visualize touch in real time, paving the way for more precise manufacturing, prosthetics, and robotic surgery.
Hephaestus Robotics Team, a youth robotics team consisting of 21 students from eight high schools across Santa Cruz County, ...
Getting a dental crown is far from enjoyable. It’s also time-consuming—preparation, molding, and fitting can require multiple ...
Scientists build a color-changing tactile sensor that lets machines “see” what they touch in ...
A team from the Guandu District Power Supply Bureau in China has developed robotic snakes capable of inspecting power lines ...
Aerospace and Mechanical Insider on MSN

Rowan University advances soft robotics education

In the public imagination, robots are often envisioned as rigid, metallic constructs—towering Transformers, Pixar’s WALL-E, ...
Discover everything you need to know about NHRL, including how robot fighting works, the rules, weight classes, weapons, ...
Treble's wave-based acoustic simulation platform uses patented algorithms to generate AI sound scenarios for robotics, ...
Nvidia unveiled what it described as the first full-stack safety platform to accelerate the industrial deployment of humanoid ...
A research team led by Professor Joongoo Lee in the Department of Chemical Engineering at POSTECH (Pohang University of ...
Scientists in Italy have developed a flexible robotic arm modelled on the octopus, combining soft materials with ...
Researcher Devashri Datta introduces AIVEX and SRIL, new approaches designed to bring context-aware risk analysis to software ...