A new wearable system uses stretchable electronics and artificial intelligence to interpret human gestures with high accuracy even in chaotic, high-motion environments.
Engineers at the University of California San Diego have developed a next-generation wearable system that enables people to control machines using everyday gestures — even while running, riding in a ...
China leads in low-cost rotary actuators, but trails Western suppliers in C3-grade roller screws needed for heavy-load, ...
For example, researchers at the Harvard University School of Engineering and Applied Science and Mass General Brigham have ...
Robots aren't always the most delicate of machines when handling fragile objects. They don't have the lightness of touch of ...
Defenseman Simon Nemec scored his third goal of the game at 3:28 of the overtime to lift the New Jersey Devils to a 4-3 win ...
J.J. Peterka and Lawson Crouse scored early in Utah’s four-goal third period, and the Mammoth rallied from two goals down to ...
Every four years at the Cybathlon, teams of researchers and technology “pilots” compete to see whose brain-computer interface ...
NEW YORK — The world’s richest man was just handed a chance to become history’s first trillionaire.
A team led by the University of Oxford has developed a new class of soft robots that operate without electronics, motors, or ...
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