WTF?! Scientists at the University of Tokyo have developed a way to apply skin engineered from biological cells onto a robot's face and keep it adhered to the surface as it "smiles." This could be a ...
Watch our interview with Professor Kevin Warwick, School of Systems Engineering, and Dr Ben Whalley, School of Pharmacy (WAV – 57MB) A multidisciplinary team at the University of Reading has developed ...
With rapid advancements in robotics and AI, the line between science fiction and reality continues to blur. At the heart of this innovation lies a breakthrough: drones designed to solve pressing ...
Scientists at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign have created organic robots that are powered by 3D-printed muscle cells and controlled with electrical pulses. These “bio-robots” are the ...
Several research groups across the United States and Europe have demonstrated that 3D-printed artificial muscles can replicate biological movements such as contracting, twisting, and lifting, bringing ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. When we think about robots, we think about complex electronic devices. We're conditioned to think about robots as sophisticated ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
Robots could learn to predict, plan navigation with new ‘bio-inspired’ framework
If you put a robot vacuum in a living room, it will meticulously map ...
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