Interesting Engineering on MSN
Fabric muscles thinner than hair could reshape wearable robotics design
South Korean researchers develop fabric muscles for lightweight wearable robots that move naturally with the human body.
The soft, pneumatic exoskeleton PASE can reduce the effort required for arm work. The perceived workload also decreases.
Tech Xplore on MSN
Robots you can wear like clothes: Automatic weaving of 'fabric muscle' brings commercialization closer
The commercialization of clothing-type wearable robots has taken a significant step forward with the development of equipment ...
Learn how lessons from medical robot design can be applied to all robotics from cobots to humanoids and autonomous mobile ...
Soft, air-powered exoskeleton eases muscle fatigue, reduces injuries and boosts workplace safety. (UTA)For workers whose jobs ...
Robots that can be worn like clothing are becoming a reality. The Korea Institute of Machinery and Materials has developed equipment capable of ...
The commercialization of clothing-type wearable robots has taken a significant step forward with the development of equipment that can continuously ...
Swisslog Healthcare has formed a strategic alliance with Austin, Texas-based Diligent Robotics Inc. to bring autonomous last-mile robots to hospitals across the U.S.
Researchers developed a soft robotic skin that enables vine robots that are just a few millimeters wide to navigate convoluted paths and fragile environments. To accomplish this, the researchers ...
UC San Diego develops soft robotic skin to steer millimeter-scale vine robots through complex environments. Read more ...
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