Giving robots and prostheses the human touch - Science Nation
Research engineers and students in the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) Biomechatronics Lab are designing artificial limbs to be more sensational, with the emphasis on sensation.
With support from the National Science Foundation (NSF), the team, led by mechanical engineer Veronica J. Santos, is constructing a language of touch that both a computer and a human can understand. The researchers are quantifying this with mechanical touch sensors that interact with objects of various shapes, sizes and textures. Using an array of instrumentation, Santos' team is able to translate that interaction into data a computer can understand.
The data is used to create a formula or algorithm that gives the computer the ability to identify patterns among the items it has in its library of experiences and something it has never felt before. This research will help the team develop artificial haptic intelligence, which is, essentially, giving robots, as well as prostheses, the "human touch."
The research in this episode is supported by NSF award #1208519, NRI-Small: Context-Driven Haptic Inquiry of Objects Based on Task Requirements for Artificial Grasp and Manipulation. NRI is the acronym for the National Robotics Initiative.
NSF Grant URL: http://www.nsf.gov/awardsearch/showAward?AWD_ID=1208519&HistoricalAwards=false
Miles O'Brien, Science Nation Correspondent and Producer
Видео Giving robots and prostheses the human touch - Science Nation канала National Science Foundation News
With support from the National Science Foundation (NSF), the team, led by mechanical engineer Veronica J. Santos, is constructing a language of touch that both a computer and a human can understand. The researchers are quantifying this with mechanical touch sensors that interact with objects of various shapes, sizes and textures. Using an array of instrumentation, Santos' team is able to translate that interaction into data a computer can understand.
The data is used to create a formula or algorithm that gives the computer the ability to identify patterns among the items it has in its library of experiences and something it has never felt before. This research will help the team develop artificial haptic intelligence, which is, essentially, giving robots, as well as prostheses, the "human touch."
The research in this episode is supported by NSF award #1208519, NRI-Small: Context-Driven Haptic Inquiry of Objects Based on Task Requirements for Artificial Grasp and Manipulation. NRI is the acronym for the National Robotics Initiative.
NSF Grant URL: http://www.nsf.gov/awardsearch/showAward?AWD_ID=1208519&HistoricalAwards=false
Miles O'Brien, Science Nation Correspondent and Producer
Видео Giving robots and prostheses the human touch - Science Nation канала National Science Foundation News
Показать
Комментарии отсутствуют
Информация о видео
6 апреля 2015 г. 22:10:41
00:03:48
Другие видео канала
Harnessing Architected Materials 🏫 | Science NationUncovering the Mystery of Cosmic Rays #spaceweatherMuon g-2 - Moving the worl'd largest electromagnetic ringChemists work up new formulas for greener plastic - Science NationSearching for Answers | Mysteries of the BrainOrigins REVEALED! Chincoteague ponies #horsesFlying Communications for First Responders 🔥👩🚒👨🏾🚒 | Science NationNature-inspired, Greener Architecture 🏦🌳 | Science NationSoft robot arm inspired by octopus attaches, wraps around, carries, and releasesStrange, surprising and Star-nosedUniverse Expansion #shortsWhat are one-birth volcanoes? 🌋#volcanoesMeet an Atmospheric ScientistWhen Nature Strikes - Flash Floods[LIVE] Iceless Antarctica | McMurdo Dry Valleys {Session 1}Mysteries of Mayan Civilization | PodcastNSF Convergence Accelerator [Research Funding]Don't wastewater--let the sun recycle it!Why is working memory so important to learning? | Ask a ScientistHow to find Antarctic crevasses | Polar Science