Que.com on MSN
The challenges robots face and why they still struggle
In the glittering panorama of technological advancement, robots are often heralded as the zenith of modern innovation. Yet, despite the ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
Beat-to-body: UK researchers’ humanoid robots get NVIDIA grant to move like dancers
Chengxu Zhou, an associate professor in UCL Computer Science, has bagged an NVIDIA Academic Grant to support the latest ...
Engineers and computer scientists are developing AI-powered robots that look and act human. Boston Dynamics invited 60 ...
Tech Xplore on MSN
Adaptive motion system helps robots achieve human-like dexterity with minimal data
Despite rapid robotic automation advancements, most systems struggle to adapt their pre-trained movements to dynamic ...
University of Minnesota Twin Cities researchers have constructed a robot that uses machine learning to fully automate a complicated microinjection process used in genetic research. In their ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
New adaptive system lets robots replicate human touch with far less training data
Japanese researchers develop an adaptive robot motion system that enables human-like grasping using minimal training data.
Picture a robot capable of changing its shape on demand, squishing, bending, or stretching to perform various tasks like navigating tight spaces or retrieving objects. While this may sound like ...
A robot, trained for the first time by watching videos of seasoned surgeons, executed the same surgical procedures as skillfully as the human doctors. The successful use of imitation learning to train ...
Why it matters: Ever since Boston Dynamics first showcased its famous legged robots in 2013, numerous organizations have introduced machines that autonomously perform various professional and ...
Industrial robot adoption has reached a point of no return. Automated machinery has become an industry standard and will only become increasingly common as time goes on. As this trend continues, ...
While it's not ready to join the workforce yet, Atlas, an AI-powered humanoid, is learning how to do human tasks.
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