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The combination of artificial intelligence and neuroscience allows a paralyzed man to manipulate a robotic arm by using his brain to imagine movements.
[Skyentific] is experimenting with this mechanism and built a 6-degree-of-freedom robotic arm with it. The mechanism doesn’t necessarily need the physical surfaces to roll across each other to ...
The result? A 3D-printed robotic arm he affectionately calls “ManiPilator.” This article is the first in a three-part series documenting [Leo]’s hands-on approach to learning robotics from ...
This story appears in the September 2017 issue of National Geographic magazine. One man, one robotic arm, dozens of electrodes—these are the elements of a breakthrough experiment that’s ...
Last week, I got a first look at the Saros Z70 and watched its signature robotic arm in action. My takeaway is that this is a really cool feature that holds a lot of promise in the future but ...
Brain computer interface (BCI) company Neuralink has been given regulatory approval to start a new trial of its implant to see if it can be used to control a robotic arm. If it proves to be ...
How does a robotic arm or a prosthetic hand learn a complex task like grasping and rotating a ball? Researchers address the classic 'nature versus nurture' question. The research demonstrates that ...
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