Early humanoid deployments will often rely on teleoperation: humans controlling robots remotely to perform useful tasks while ...
Human–robot collaboration and interaction represent a rapidly evolving interdisciplinary field in which robotics, artificial intelligence and human factors engineering converge to develop systems that ...
Image courtesy by QUE.com Artificial Intelligence (AI) has made substantial strides in recent years, with one of its most ...
1X Robotics, backed by OpenAI, has unveiled the Neo beta, a humanoid robot demonstrating advanced movement and agility. The robot’s fluidity and human-like actions have sparked discussions about its ...
The Consumer Electronics Show (CES) 2026 was once again a melting pot of innovation and futuristic technologies. It set the ...
Asa Whitney Professor of Mechanical Engineering Mark Yim has completed the second phase of a human-robot interaction research project at Penn’s ModLab. The project primarily aims to develop Quori, a ...
Modern Engineering Marvels on MSN
Humanoid robots: The hype machine meets harsh engineering reality
What do you get when you combine billion dollar hype, demo videos, and the ability to build robots which can’t even dust the shelf without neonatal care from humanbeings? A dump of regrets, and at ...
Tech Xplore on MSN
Technology that helps robots read human intentions could lead to safer, smarter, more trustworthy machines
Robots are becoming part of our everyday lives, from health care to home assistance. But for humans to truly trust and ...
Many lonely people would rather deal with a robot than interact with an actual human, according to research co-led by Newcastle University. Contrary to the common assumption that lonely people would ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
China develops neuromorphic e-skin that lets humanoid robots sense pain and react
Researchers in China built a neuromorphic robotic skin that lets humanoid robots sense pain and react instantly to harm.
Robotics is becoming a natural part of our daily lives and our future, but how can we learn to understand how robots behave?
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results