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Training four-legged robots as if they were dogs
Over the next decades, robots are expected to make their way into a growing number of households, public spaces, and ...
A Chinese humanoid robot by XPeng fell face-first during its debut, drawing attention online and a response from the CEO.
By learning from human touch, robots can grip objects more safely and adapt to real-world conditions without massive training data.
Robots are becoming smarter and more common, but their ability to handle objects with human-like precision remains limited.
Aidan Meller and his AI-powered creation Ai-Da are exhibiting what they believe to be the first building concept designed by ...
Can robots grasp diverse objects adaptively like humans? Published in National Science Review, researchers from Tsinghua University reports a human-taught sensory-control synergy approach that ...
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