New programmable materials can sense their own movements
Engineers 3D print materials with networks of sensors directly incorporated.
Engineers 3D print materials with networks of sensors directly incorporated.
Inspired by a fiddler crab eye, scientists developed an amphibious artificial vision system with a panoramic visual field.
Neuroscience professor and Science Hub investigator Ted Adelson explains how simulating the sense of touch with a camera can make robots smarter.
MassRobotics, a nonprofit founded by several MIT alumni, is advancing an industry that will play an increasingly important role in our lives.
This robotic system uses radio frequency signals, computer vision, and complex reasoning to efficiently find items hidden under a pile.
A new system lets robots manipulate soft, deformable material into various shapes from visual inputs, which could one day enable better home assistants.
A new general-purpose optimizer can speed up the design of walking robots, self-driving vehicles, and other autonomous systems.
Inspired by fireflies, researchers create insect-scale robots that can emit light when they fly, which enables motion tracking and communication.
Thousands of children participate in MIT-developed artificial intelligence curriculum.
With modular components and an easy-to-use 3D interface, this interactive design pipeline enables anyone to create their own customized robotic hand.
In person for the first time in three years, the 2.007 (Design and Manufacturing I) Robot Competition celebrated its founder.
Researchers have developed a technique that enables a robot to learn a new pick-and-place task with only a handful of human demonstrations.
The system could provide teleoperated endovascular treatment to patients during the critical time window after a stroke begins.
The programs are designed to foster an understanding of how artificial intelligence technologies work, including their social implications.
A new robotic manipulation course provides a broad survey of state-of-the-art robotics, equipping students to identify and solve the field’s biggest problems.