Humans pay enormous attention to lips during conversation, and robots have struggled badly to keep up. A new robot developed ...
Scientists have created a robot that learns lip movements by watching humans rather than following preset rules. The ...
The robot learned the ability to use its 26 facial motors by practicing to imitate human lip motions in front of the mirror ...
They run on light and are the world’s smallest, fully programmable, autonomous devices ...
Scientists have built microscopic, light-powered robots that can think, swim, and operate independently at the scale of ...
Researchers have created microscopic robots so small they’re barely visible, yet smart enough to sense, decide, and move completely on their own. Powered by light and equipped with tiny computers, the ...
Despite their size, the robots can navigate liquids, respond to their environment and operate without external control.
Copying human expressions is super-difficult, but scientists used hours of YouTube videos to teach a robot how humans move ...
Most robot headlines follow a familiar script: a machine masters one narrow trick in a controlled lab, then comes the bold promise that everything is about to change. I usually tune those stories out.
A humanoid learned to control its facial motors by watching itself in a mirror before imitating human lip movement from ...
The robot can bend, grasp and carry in ways humans can’t, which could help it navigate spaces too confined for human arms.
The Namibia University of Science and Technology has launched the country’s first dedicated degree programs in artificial ...