Interesting Engineering on MSN
Robots read human brain signals to stop mistakes before they happen in real time
Robots can follow commands, but they still fail at recognizing a mistake before it ...
Humanoid robots have arms and legs, but can they work alongside human beings, or will they replace them? Their use is growing, but are they ready?
Tech Xplore on MSN
Humanoid robots master parkour and acquire human-like agility
Humanoid robots, robotic systems with a human-like body structure, have the potential of tackling various real-world tasks ...
Tech Xplore on MSN
Smarter, faster, and more human: AI system helps robots outpace their human teachers
Robots are increasingly learning new skills by watching people. From folding laundry to handling food, many real-world, humanlike tasks are too nuanced to be efficiently programmed step by step.
Real-world AI for robots is hard and expensive to create. Or is it? Researchers at a UK university just showed us how to teach robots like humans ...
New research helps robots combine language and gestures to find objects in cluttered spaces, improving how they understand human intent.
Can a robot keep up with Serena Williams? Researchers have taught a humanoid robot to play tennis with humans — and it can ...
Every Wednesday and Friday, TechNode’s Briefing newsletter delivers a roundup of the most important news in China tech, straight to your inbox. Sign up If large language models are the brains of ...
Roboticists have struggled to get humanoid robots to effectively replicate athletic sports skills, such as those needed for tennis. These sports require highly dynamic motion, quick reactions, and ...
This ain't teleoperation. Chinese researchers have tested a new, much quicker and easier method of teaching robots to play ...
China’s Unitree G1 humanoid robot plays tennis after training on 5 hours of amateur motion capture data from five players.
Gadget Review on MSN
Robots read brain signals and stop mistakes in real time
Robots now read brain signals to detect mistakes 300ms before humans react, using EEG technology to create safer human-machine collaboration systems.
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