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    Home»BioTech»Robot Skin Helps Machines Feel Touch, Read Braille
    BioTech

    Robot Skin Helps Machines Feel Touch, Read Braille

    Sam ArnoldBy Sam ArnoldJuly 29, 2020No Comments2 Mins Read
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    A team of researchers from Singapore have created an artificial skin that lets robots detect touch 1,000 times faster than humans.
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    Robotics engineers continue to amaze with their creations. This time, engineers have made artificial skin that gives robots a sense of touch. With this skin, they can process the sensation many times faster than humans can. 

    The Robot that Can Feel Touch

    Engadget reports that researchers at the National University of Singapore created the artificial robot skin. The team equipped theimt with the new surface. With this skin, they detected touch 1,000 times faster than any humans. Likewise, the NUS robot knew the “shape, texture, and hardness of objects” ten times faster than a human can blink. For this, they used an event-based camera.

    With this material, the NUS team believes they can speed up the development of caregiving robots. In the future, maybe robots can even do surgery.

    “Loihi” the Intel Chip

    Gizmodo reports that the NUS team used the Intel chip called Loihi for their artificial robot skin. Before this test, the NUS team used the Loihi on their skin to teach a robot hand to read Braille. The Loihi chip processed the data sent by the robot. Its Braille results showed a 92% accuracy rate, using 20 times less power than standard Von Neumann processors.

    The chip that can smell can now help robots feel touch https://t.co/qyImx6nirx pic.twitter.com/hKe3AveNEh

    — Gizmodo (@Gizmodo) July 28, 2020

    The skin and camera work together to send data to the Loihi chip, as needed. Both the camera and the skin detect touch when the hand picks up an object. This method allows the Loihi chip to process data quickly. Both the skin and camera also improve the accuracy of the system by 10%. 

    The NUS Team and the Robot Skin

    Harold Soh said his NUS team was “excited by these results.” The results of this test can help scientists create a robot that can combine sight and touch.

    Chip Loihi NUS Robot Skin Tech
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    Sam Arnold

    Arnold is a senior British tech reporter at Tekrati. Before joining Tekrati, Arnold worked as an editor for his University Newspaper, writing sharable content for a student audience. Sam loves movies, running, and anything written by Oliver Sacks. The drink he chose is tea, which he does not recommend in large quantities.

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