Humanoid robots are starting to gain something that once belonged firmly in the realm of science fiction: a sense of pain. Chinese researchers have built a neuromorphic electronic skin that lets ...
Read on to know how researchers develop a sensory skin that helps robots feel damage and pull away from harmful contact in real time.
Explore how neuromorphic chips and brain-inspired computing bring low-power, efficient intelligence to edge AI, robotics, and IoT through spiking neural networks and next-gen processors. Pixabay, ...
Robot skin that senses touch and pain — and triggers instant reflexes — makes robots more like humans. It probably also makes ...
Researchers in Hong Kong have developed a neuromorphic electronic skin that allows humanoid robots to sense touch, detect ...
The NRE-skin includes a built-in pain centre, which reacts to dangerous stimuli nearly instantly and protects the robot from ...
Researchers in China have built a neuromorphic robotic electronic skin that allows humanoid robots to sense touch, detect injury, and respond to harmful contact with rapid, reflex-like movements ...
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 ...
US researchers solve partial differential equations with neuromorphic hardware, taking us closer to world's first ...