News

Unlike traditional robotic skins that rely on a patchwork of different sensors, this material can detect pressure, temperature, pain, and even distinguish multiple contact points all at once.
Researchers from Cambridge and UCL have developed a flexible robotic skin that senses heat, pressure, and pain using a single gel-based material. It mimics human touch and has potential uses in ...
Researchers Create Most Human-Like Robot Skin Yet. Scientists have developed a robotic skin that mimics human touch. The ...
Synthetic skin in robotics isn’t entirely new. Since as early as 2016, researchers have demonstrated the ability to use small sensors in robotic fingertips and hands to help them sense the shape ...
Robots have been given the human touch - thanks to a highly-sensitive electronic ‘skin’ that enables them to detect ...
Clone Robotics, a pioneering startup in this field, is developing advanced, soft-bodied, musculoskeletal androids designed to ...
Unlike other solutions for robotic touch, which usually work via sensors embedded in small areas and require different sensors to detect different types of touch, the entirety of the electronic ...
What happens when you add a full carpet deep cleaner to a robot vacuum? Anker proves it works with the eufy Robot Vacuum Omni ...
New synthetic skin tech gives robots a refined sense of touch, enabling safer human interactions & precision handling.