Scientists create self-repairing robotic skin with pain detection and modular magnetic patches. The neuromorphic e-skin ...
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.
Explore how neuromorphic chips and brain-inspired computing bring low-power, efficient intelligence to edge AI, robotics, and ...
The researchers behind the recent work, based in China, decided to implement something similar for an artificial skin that ...
If you accidentally put your hand on a hot object, you'll naturally pull it away fast, before you have to think about it.
Neuromorphic computing, inspired by the neural architectures and functions of biological brains, is revolutionizing the development of highly efficient, adaptive computing systems. In robotics, this ...
Read on to know how researchers develop a sensory skin that helps robots feel damage and pull away from harmful contact in ...
Neuromorphic computers, inspired by the architecture of the human brain, are proving surprisingly adept at solving complex ...
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 ...