Robots are starting to gain something that looks a lot like a sense of touch, and in some cases even a crude version of pain.
Humanoid robots are starting to gain something that once belonged firmly in the realm of science fiction: a sense of pain.
Ensuring Technology provides the answer: only when they can truly replicate the human sense of touch. From January 6th to 9th, Ensuring Technology, the pioneer in embodied intelligent tactile ...
Researchers in China built a neuromorphic robotic skin that lets humanoid robots sense pain and react instantly to harm.
The researchers behind the recent work, based in China, decided to implement something similar for an artificial skin that ...
Human skin transmits sensory information as electrical pulses, or spikes, that encode signals related to pressure and pain. NRE-skin mimics this biological process by converting pressure ...
Researchers at the City University of Hong Kong have developed an artificial skin that mimics key functions of the human nervous system, marking a step towards robots that can feel touch, detect ...
Inspired by human brain, neuromorphic computing technologies have made important breakthroughs in recent years as alternatives to overcome the power and latency shortfalls of traditional digital ...
A pressure-mechanical integrated synaptic device inspired by human skin mechanoreceptors and synapses that recognizes different touch patterns for discrete affective state classification. Human ...
For over three decades, Tekscan, a pioneer in the realm of tactile sensing, has been at the forefront of market innovation and application mastery. Originating from a groundbreaking thin-film flexible ...