Engineers at Queen Mary University of London have built a new color-changing tactile sensor, which allows robots to "see" and ...
Researchers have developed a soft mechanical force sensor that enables robots to detect touch ...
Allowing robots to "feel" is complex. A sensor made of mechanochromic material aims to simplify tactile detection.
Scientists build a color-changing tactile sensor that lets machines “see” what they touch in ...
Norwegian robotics company Sonair has unveiled ADAR One, which it says is the world’s ...
The ADAR One sensor is now suitable for SIL2 and PL d applications and is certified to fulfil all requirements of the ...
A new system embeds sensors into the material itself to make it easier for robots to see and touch in real time.
If you ever built a line following robot, you’ll be nostalgic about [Jeremy’s] light-seeking robot. It is a very simple build since there is no CPU and, therefore, also no software. The trick, of ...
The company claims the sensor, which is designed for AMRs and industrial automation, is the first of its kind.